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which of the following? seenagapeNovember 5, 2015 The address 6FFE:FFFF:0000:2F3B:04AC:00FF:FEBE:5C4A is an example of which of the following? A. APIPA B. MAC C. IPv4 D. IPv6 Show Answer
Tammy says: May 11, 2016 at 10:53 pm How do you know the difference between MAC ADDRESS, IPv4 AND IPv6? 0 0
Prophet Muhammad says: May 12, 2016 at 2:20 am You may want to work on the A+ exam before the Network+ if you are really needing to ask that. 0 0
Tammy says: May 26, 2016 at 6:34 am I am not asking about the definition and their purpose i am asking about the way it is written. 0 0
fill werrel says: July 14, 2016 at 4:26 pm test seems to be broken there are a few answers where all the answers and the question is highlighted 0 0
sir Coms says: October 16, 2016 at 6:57 am everything is highlighted here even the question???????? 0 0
kaveman5 says: November 2, 2016 at 10:09 am MAC Address: AB:CD:EF:12:34:56 = 48 bit with 6 groups of Octets 6×8=48 IPv4: 192.168.0.1 = Easily distinguishable 32 bit IPv6: FE82:ABCD:EF12:3456:789AB:CAE1:9876:5432 = 128 bit 8 groups of hexadecimal digits. Hope this helps! 0 0
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Christopher Schaffner says: May 10, 2017 at 9:31 pm Yeah this is broken, there is no way this could be an IPv4 Address. Its written in hexidecimal not deciaml. Ipv4 will always be similar to this format 192.169.xxx.xxx. as for mac address it is written in xx.xx.xx.xx.xx style of format. 0 0
How do you know the difference between MAC ADDRESS, IPv4 AND IPv6?
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You may want to work on the A+ exam before the Network+ if you are really needing to ask that.
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I am not asking about the definition and their purpose i am asking about the way it is written.
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test seems to be broken there are a few answers where all the answers and the question is highlighted
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when you click check answer
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everything is highlighted here even the question????????
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MAC Address: AB:CD:EF:12:34:56 = 48 bit with 6 groups of Octets 6×8=48
IPv4: 192.168.0.1 = Easily distinguishable 32 bit
IPv6: FE82:ABCD:EF12:3456:789AB:CAE1:9876:5432 = 128 bit 8 groups of hexadecimal digits.
Hope this helps!
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BTW, that new 1438Q N10-006 Dumps are Available here for Free:
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Best Regards!
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Yeah this is broken, there is no way this could be an IPv4 Address. Its written in hexidecimal not deciaml. Ipv4 will always be similar to this format 192.169.xxx.xxx. as for mac address it is written in xx.xx.xx.xx.xx style of format.
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Its not IPv4 or a MAC, its an IPv6 address.
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