The IP register contains the address of the next instruction to fetch and execute. Normally, IP is incremented by the number of bytes in the instruction after execution of that instruction, unless a transfer of control occurs, in which case IP is loaded with a new value.
CS
The IANA organization was originally responsible for registering an IP address for an organization, and also handling domain name requests, and so forth. IANA is now part of ICANN, which oversees these areas and others within the Internet. One no longer has to register directly via IANA (which used to be the only way to get an IP address for your network in the past). You can register via other domain registrars and ISP organizations, which do the work for you.
it depends on the amount of privacy
IP(instruction Pointer) is a processor Register IP store the offset address of the next instruction IP can be modified by Jump & call condition IP can Increment by 1,2,3.......bytes Regard:tiger_ucet@yahoo.com
There is no PC register in the 8086/8088. It is called the IP register by Intel and it stands for the Instruction Pointer. It contains the address of the current/next instruction to be executed.
In the 8086 microprocessor, the register that stores the interrupt and subroutine return address is the Instruction Pointer (IP) register. When an interrupt occurs or a subroutine is called, the current instruction address is pushed onto the stack, allowing the processor to return to that location after the interrupt or subroutine execution is complete. The IP register works in conjunction with the Code Segment (CS) register to determine the effective address of the next instruction to execute.
Your ip is banned due to previous abuse. Nice.
Only Service Providers can register an IP subnet. So if you not to claim a subnet, talk to your SP, they can assign you a subnet. If you want to have your subnet registered properly with your domainname, etc. again speak to you SP, they are repsonsible for feeding this info into the admin. Regards, Jan Hazeleger
Yes, unless you are using some sort of anonymizer to redirect your requests.
It is exactly what 'near' means: change IP, keep CS
ok u can if u just keep on click ing until u r dead hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha