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Updated:03:40 PM CT Jan 01, 2007
Posted:03:39 PM CT Jan 01, 2007

What is an IP Address?

Author: Steve Lautenschlager

BrowsersInternetWeb

 Summary

An IP address uniquely identifies a computer or other device on the internet.

Click here to see your current IP address.

 What is an IP Address?

An IP address uniquely identifies your computer on the internet among all the other computers throughout the world or if your computer is not connected to the internet it uniquely identifies your computer among all the others on your local network.

IP addresses all have the same form: a series of numbers separated by a dot such as 117.25.44.244. IP addresses typically consist of 4 numbers. Each of the 4 numbers is between 0 and 255. The numbers are sometimes called octets because in binary form they are each represented by a series of 8 bits or 1 byte of data.

Most IP addresses today contain only 4 numbers. But we eventually discovered this wasn't going to be enough. One octect will allow you up to 255 different numbers. Two octects (255.255) will allow you to have 255^2 unique combinations, or 65,025. Three octects (255.255.255) allows you to have 255^3 or 16 million. And finally 4 octects allows more than 4 billion combinations. You would think that would be enough, but clearly if every person on Earth had a computer we'd run out of IP addresses. So, IPv6 is developing, an IP standard containing 6 octects or 275 trillion possible combinations. Maybe that will get us by for a while.

With the growth of the internet and the realization that in the not too distant future, your car, microwave, refrigerator, cell phone and VCR may each have their own IP address, we will quickly surpass 4 billion IPs and IPv6 will become ubiquitous.

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Steve Lautenschlager (steve)
Steve is the founder and creator of Cambia Research. Developing and maintaining the site combines his passions for technology, writing and education.
Steve holds a Ph.D. in particle physics from Duke University, has worked at CERN, the European center for particle physics (where the web was born) and in Microsoft's web division with microsoft.com, msnbc.com and other web properties. Steve is a web consultant specializing in Microsoft.NET technologies. Read more here.


 
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