Noun

Singular IP address

Plural IP addresses

IP address (plural IP addresses)

  1. (Internet) (Internet Protocol address) A number assigned to each computer's or other device's network interface(s) which are active on a network supporting the Internet Protocol, in order to distinguish each network interface (and hence each networked device) from every other network interface anywhere on the network. (Normally written out in dotted decimal form, e.g. 127.242.0.19).

Synonyms

From Wiktionary under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Thu Jun 4 13:10:18 2009

An Internet Protocol (IP) address is a numerical label that is assigned to devices participating in a computer network, that uses the Internet Protocol for communication between its nodes. An IP address serves two principal functions: host or network interface identification and location addressing. Its role has been characterized as follows: "A name indicates what we seek. An address indicates where it is. A route indicates how to get there."

The designers of TCP/IP defined an IP address as a 32-bit number and this system, known as Internet Protocol Version 4 or IPv4, is still in use today. However, due to the enormous growth of the Internet and the resulting depletion of available addresses, a new addressing system (IPv6), using 128 bits for the address, was developed in 1995 and last standardized by RFC 2460 in 1998. Although IP addresses are stored as binary numbers, they are usually displayed in human-readable notations, such as 208.77.188.166 (for IPv4), and 2001:db8:0:1234:0:567:1:1 (for IPv6).

The Internet Protocol also routes data packets between networks; IP addresses specify the locations of the source and destination nodes in the topology of the routing system. For this purpose, some of the bits in an IP address are used to designate a subnetwork. The number of these bits is indicated in CIDR notation, appended to the IP address; e.g., 208.77.188.166/24.

As the development of private networks raised the threat of IPv4 address exhaustion, RFC 1918 set aside a group of private address spaces that may be used by anyone on private networks. They are often used with network address translators to connect to the global public Internet.

The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), which manages the IP address space allocations globally, cooperates with five Regional Internet Registries (RIRs) to allocate IP address blocks to Local Internet Registries (Internet service providers) and other entities.

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Sat Jul 31 16:19:19 2010

How do you change your IP address? Is there a free way to do it?
Q. I'm looking for a way to change my IP address I don't have money to buy those expensive IP address software programs. Can you guys help? thanks!
Asked by SSJ4 Goku - Mon Aug 25 21:23:24 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments

A. First it is rare that any ISP gives you a fixed IP address unless you are paying for a commercial account or have paid extra for a fixed IP addresss. You can determine your IP address by opening a command line window and entering the following command. ipconfig /ALL Does not have to be in caps. This command will give you your IP address. Then shut down your computer and wait about 30 minutes and restart it and do the same thing. Most ISP's use what is called dynamic IP addressing which is assigned when you connect to the network. You can also find your IP address by going to the web site below. The second site talks about how to change your IP address. If your IP address starts with 192.168.xx.xx then it is an internal local… [cont.]
Answered by Wizard Of OS - Mon Aug 25 21:43:49 2008

How to find the ip address of a client machine from a web application?
Q. I need to find the IP address (or the MAC address) of the actual machine that is using my web application. Getting it from the server variables at the server end will not work because the user machines are behind proxies. I need a client-side scripting solution. The users are agreeable to the web application checking for their machine IP and will allow it.
Asked by msk - Thu Sep 20 14:03:35 2007 - - 1 Answers - 2 Comments

A.
related terms: Ip Address Ip Addresses Network Network Interface
Protocol Device Addressing Assigned
Software Networks Bits Domain Names

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