Classful addresses are no longer given out. Traditionally, this would require a Class B network, since it has a large enough range. A Class C network only has 256 addresses, but two adjacent Class C addresses would also work.Classful addresses are no longer given out. Traditionally, this would require a Class B network, since it has a large enough range. A Class C network only has 256 addresses, but two adjacent Class C addresses would also work.Classful addresses are no longer given out. Traditionally, this would require a Class B network, since it has a large enough range. A Class C network only has 256 addresses, but two adjacent Class C addresses would also work.Classful addresses are no longer given out. Traditionally, this would require a Class B network, since it has a large enough range. A Class C network only has 256 addresses, but two adjacent Class C addresses would also work.
License? Where do you get this? In a Class B network there are 2 to the 16th power addresses. Class B = 255.255.0.0 65536 addresses In a Class A network there are 2 to the 24th power addresses Class A = 255.0.0.0 16,777,216 addresses In a class C network there are 2 to the 8th power addresses Class C = 255.255.255.0 256 addresses Class A around 16 million Class B around 65,000 Class C is actually 254 NOT 256. IP addresses are leased and therefore the lessee is given a license to use that particular IP address.
The number of possible IP address decreases as one steps down from Class A to Class C IP addresses because the availability of usable hosts. There is a decrease in the number of usable hosts from Class A to Class C IP addresses.
A class C address.
15 or 16.
True
254 - a class C subnet uses 8 bits for the hosts and 0 and 255 are reserved.
Medium-sized corporations typically do not want a block of Class C addresses because they often require more IP addresses than a single Class C block can provide. A Class C block offers only 256 IP addresses (with 254 usable), which may be insufficient for their needs as they expand or deploy various services. Additionally, managing multiple Class C networks can complicate network management and increase overhead. Instead, they may prefer larger blocks or a more efficient allocation of IP addresses through techniques like subnetting or using private IP addresses with NAT.
IP addresses are divided into five IP classes:IP address class AIP address class BIP address class CIP address class DIP address class E
6
class b, c, and d
No, because the range for class C addresses is 192 - 223, and the first octet of the address 191.76.43.10 is a class B address.