15 Jan
2013
15 Jan
'13
1:13 p.m.
On 1/15/13 10:04 AM, Randy Carpenter wrote:
----- Original Message -----
On 1/15/13 9:31 AM, Bruce H McIntosh wrote:
On Tue, 2013-01-15 at 17:23 +0000, Warren Bailey wrote:
I still call a /24 a class c too.. :/ lol More efficient that way - "class c" uses fewer syllables than "slash twenty four" :-)
You realize that class-c address space was only found within 192/8 e.g. if you print it in hex, C0000000. so not only is it historically irrelevant but you're using it wrong anyway. But, class B is not B0000000 and A is not A0000000, so is that actually true, or just a coincidence? yeah /3 not /8
class-a is the first half of the address space class-b is the next 1/4 ...
Class C was actually 192.0.0.0-223.255.255.255 (192.0.0.0/3)
-Randy