Who's ip is this 192.168.1.1?

Who's ip is this 192.168.1.1?

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tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1918
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ur mom's anus.

strange that looks similar to someone i know....

OP's mom is looser than a single-port hub, she accepts all traffic even when hundreds of packets are sent at once.

everyone's

Not mine. Mine are all in the 172.16 range.

Must be yours.

Wrong, dipshit. That is reserved for the router.

Loop around ip, ddos it

And many people have a router... So in a way...

>192.168.1.1
its usually a home router user.
user machines are usually 192.168.1.2 and upto 192.168.1.255

192.168 (means private channel)
xxx.xxx.1.x is the network ring (meaning everyone on the network must have this number to stay in the network ring

the last number is the user computer number.
you can only have up to 255 PC's in a single network ring.

I like how wrong you are.

The current state of Sup Forums

is dis bait on bait?

what 192.168 i9s the only one of 2 private network rings deicated to home users.

I'm not talking about public interwebs rings.
I'm A+ certified retard idoits

dumb frogposter
*whose
192.168.1.1 is a one of the IP ranges reserved for Private Address Space.
tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1918

also XXX.XXX.1.X
can also be anynumber from 1 to 255.
you can have 256 but the last one is usaully a swtich so it doesn't count.

hacking right nao OP I'll print pizzas

>I'm A+ certified retard
alteast you know

you realize you can have any internal ip on your home network?

xxx.xxx.000.xxx
&
xxx.xxx.001.xxx
correct?

Please google the term 'network ring', read up and tell me if your local network is a 'network ring'...

/24

it's mine

>you can have 256
Not if you put the fourth octet on.

It seems like no one in this thread knows what a mask is lol...

>what is CIDR

>192.168.1.1
>IP range

Let's go about correcting you, shall we?

192.168 is one of three network addresses reserved for private networks. The other two being 172.16 and 10.X.
192.168 is generally used for class C networks, 172.16 for class B and 10.X for class A.

The third octet of the 192.168 address usually denotes the subnet under a standard 255.255.255.0 netmask but, considering the whole 192.168 address space is reserved, you can have netmasks up to 255.255.0.0 if you really want, but that's pretty uncommon.

By convention gateways usually occupy the beginning or end of the network address space, .1 or .254 in a network with a netmask ending in .0, but there is nothing stopping you putting them wherever you want.

You can have a lot more than 255 PCs in a single network, this is determined entirely by the netmask. I am personally using a 255.255.240.0 netmask which gives me up to 4094 (with network and broadcast addresses removed) devices on the network.

babbys first compy class