The number of usable hosts per subunit is calculated by subtracting 2 from the total number of IP addresses in that subunit. This is because one address is reserved for the network address and another is reserved for the broadcast address.
216,000 miles per hour.
About 2.3 feet per second.
About two feet per minute.
100 miles per hour is 146.67 feet per second.
About 3,712.8 km/h
that gives you 16 subnets with 14 usable IPs for hosts that is because one is for subnet and one for broadcas in that subnet for example: 192.168.1.0/28 - subnet number 192.168.1.15 -broadcast number usable IPs for hosts - IPs between them that is 14
There are 16 bits available; it is up to you how many of those bits you reserve for the subnet, and how many for the individual hosts within each subnet.
255.255.255.224 will select a network of 32 IP addresses, with the lowest reserved as the network identifier, and the highest as the broadcast address, leaving 30 usable host IP addresses.
The maximum number of hosts per class B network is 65536.
First octet rule for each class:Class A: 0xxxxxxxClass B: 10xxxxxxClass C: 110xxxxxClass A range is 0 - 1270.0.0.0 and 127.0.0.0 are not "routable" IP addresses. One defines all networks and the other is the loopback. We have a total of 126 usable networks and 16,777,214 usable hostaddresses per network. There are even less if we don't count the private address of 10.0.0.0 (RFC 1918).Class B range is 128 - 191There are 16,384 total networks in this class; that's including the private addresses of 172.16.0.0 - 172.31.0.0 (RFC 1918). There are a total of 65,534 usable host addresses per network.Class C range is 192 - 223There are 2,097,152 total networks in this class; that's including the private addresses of 192.168.0.0 - 192.168.255.0 (RFC 1918). There are 254 usable hosts addresses per network.
Yield is the amount of usable crop per plant, per acre or per 'measurement'.
If you need to divide it up into the maximum number of subnets containing at least 500 hosts each, you should use a /23 subnet mask. This will provide you with 128 networks of 510 hosts each. If you used a /24 mask, you would be limited to 254 hosts. Similarly, a /22 mask would be wasteful, allowing you 1022 hosts.
How many possible host addresses are there in a Class A range?Class A range is 0 - 1270.0.0.0 and 127.0.0.0 are not "routable" IP addresses. One defines all networks and the other is the loopback. We have a total of 126 usable networks and 16,777,214 usable hostaddresses per network.
one for broadcast i.e 256 and anthoer one is network i.e 0(zero)
The salary could be anywhere from $150,000 - $350,000 per year.
Voltage is not "used" Voltage is constant.
255.255.248.0