On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 1:36 PM, Kendall Shaw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: ... > I'm having a hard time understanding it. In many places they use 2 > numbers, e.g. 2(21) or 232 (4,294,967,296). Can you understand what they > are saying?
Sounds like the superscript notation for exponentiation was lost somewhere along the line. If we instead use 'x^y' to represent x to the y'th power, then that text should have ended with something like e.g., 2 (2^1) or 2^32 (4,294,967,296). > "IPv4 defines a 32-bit address which means that there are > only 232 (4,294,967,296) IPv4 addresses available." > > 232 what? That should be 2^32 too > On page 11: > > "The first step in the planning process is to take the maximum number of > subnets required and round up to the nearest power of two. For example, > if an organization needs nine subnets, 23 (or 8) will not provide > enough subnet addressing space, so the network administrator will > need to round up to 24 (or 16)." > > 23 or 8 what? Bits? What are 23 and 8 alternatives of? 24 or 16 looks > like alternative prefix lengths for class A or B networks, but I don't > get 23 or 8. 2^3 = 8 2^4 = 16 Philip Guenther