your awesome but Im going for my net+ and what if the # of subnets isnt provided what happends then>? sorry if this question may sound ignorant .. i just really need some help in this if somebody can help me through Gtalk username is dominiiking that would really help me out THX everyone
uhm. .for me, we doesn't need to memorize the classes. .it is on the subnet mask. .for example. . the first 8 bits represents the class a and the next is class b. . one 255 is equal to a class :)
uhhh... you didn't wright /24 you wrote /27.....
iloveskateborders 2 days ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Can someone plz solve this for me
1) You were given the address range 177.177.200.0, with subnet mask of 255.255.255.128
a) how many IPs are in the range?
b) how many usuable IPs are there in the range?
c) divide this range into 3 subranges with the first two ranges having 16 IPs. Calculate the following:
- Subnet masks of the 3 subranges
- Network and broadcast addresses of the 3 subranges
mikeset116 3 months ago
Class A is between 1 - 126 , 127 is reserved for loop back which is normally used for testing .
dhagax 3 months ago
thank you
woolyhatkatt 4 months ago
Class A is actually 0-126 because the 127 is reserved for the loop back.
soxxexquisite 7 months ago 4
@soxxexquisite
Your are right and wrong
Class A addresses ARE 0-127, however the 127 set IS reserved for loopback.
Tharc 3 months ago
Thank you! I admire the way you explained it. So clear and informative
babygiz2006 8 months ago
your awesome but Im going for my net+ and what if the # of subnets isnt provided what happends then>? sorry if this question may sound ignorant .. i just really need some help in this if somebody can help me through Gtalk username is dominiiking that would really help me out THX everyone
dominiiking 10 months ago
Thank you
2333xxcoolxx 10 months ago
Please don't teach, you don't know how and you made mistakes!
polarbear60 11 months ago
Thanks for the tutorial, dont you need a different mask for each new network? a different /24 for example?
godonholiday 1 year ago
nice video. . :) kinda wiggly but it is ok. . :)
uhm. .for me, we doesn't need to memorize the classes. .it is on the subnet mask. .for example. . the first 8 bits represents the class a and the next is class b. . one 255 is equal to a class :)
jhaer27 1 year ago
hi, you said 148.63.46.36 is class C !!!
nevergetangry 1 year ago
@nevergetangry its on the subnet mask. .
148.63.46.36/8 is class a
148.63.46.36/16 is class b
148.63.46.36/24 is class c
148.63.46.36/30 is class d
jhaer27 1 year ago
A man 2 to the 3 power is 6 not 8, you needed 2 to the 4th power to get 8 minus 2 to = 6 for the answer to be correct.
chg4no1 2 years ago
@chg4no1 2 to the 3rd power does equal 8, however, when you multiply 2 and 3 it equals 6 (this is probably what you were thinking of)
aznskoogyrl 1 year ago
@chg4no1 2 to the power of 3 means 2x2x2 The way it works is this (2x2)x2. SO the first part is 2x2 which is 4. So 4x2 is 8. The answer would be 8.
svtcontour 1 year ago
iloveyou heman!!
Vina410 2 years ago
LMFCO @ shop shop
KMETS523 2 years ago