In a standard MAC address, the first 24 bits are assigned by the manufacturer and are known as the Organizationally Unique Identifier (OUI). This unique identifier is used to identify the manufacturer of the network interface card (NIC). The remaining 24 bits are assigned by the manufacturer to uniquely identify the device within their range of addresses.
MAC address is the Layer 2 based unique address assigned (burned) to Network Interface Card. Out of 48 bits First 24 bits are assigned to Manufacturers (Of NIC Cards) & other 24 bits are assigned to each NIC by Manufacturer. 48 bits in MAC address provides unexhaustive possibility in near time for manufacturing NICs with unique identity number.
A means accumulator , it is used to store 8 bit data not address because address is of 16 bits .
The built-in identifying address coded into a Network Interface Card (NIC) is called a MAC address. It is a unique identifier assigned to the hardware by the manufacturer and is used to identify devices on a network. MAC addresses are typically 48 bits long and are displayed in hexadecimal format.
An IP address comes in two formats: ipV4 and ipV6. In IpV4 32 bits are allocated to the IP address. In IpV6, 128 bits are allocated to the address. This is done by the protocol and is a standard for developing an IP address.
The size of an IPv4 address is 32 bits, or 4 bytes.
This is MAC Address comprising of 48 bits (six blocks of double digit hexadecimal numbers)
In IP version 4, an IP address has 32 bits, or 4 bytes.In IP version 4, an IP address has 32 bits, or 4 bytes.In IP version 4, an IP address has 32 bits, or 4 bytes.In IP version 4, an IP address has 32 bits, or 4 bytes.
128-bit IP addresses
A MAC address consists of 48 bits, usually represented as a string of 12 hexadecimal digits
Assuming IP version 4 (the current standard), a complete IP address has 32 bits. /16 means that the first 16 bits specify the network; the remaining bits (also 16 in this case - calculated as 32 minus 16) specify the host.Assuming IP version 4 (the current standard), a complete IP address has 32 bits. /16 means that the first 16 bits specify the network; the remaining bits (also 16 in this case - calculated as 32 minus 16) specify the host.Assuming IP version 4 (the current standard), a complete IP address has 32 bits. /16 means that the first 16 bits specify the network; the remaining bits (also 16 in this case - calculated as 32 minus 16) specify the host.Assuming IP version 4 (the current standard), a complete IP address has 32 bits. /16 means that the first 16 bits specify the network; the remaining bits (also 16 in this case - calculated as 32 minus 16) specify the host.
You need 20 bits of address bus to address 1 Mb of memory.
48 bits is a typical MAC address in bits.