Tried a few other IP addresses out and seems to be in base 8. Only the 3 LSB
can be used (as with 4 bits the MSB would be units of 512). In fact I'm
probably wrong in calling them MSB LSB as its not binary so not a Bit.
In fact if you ping 0000000010.00000000020.00000000030.00000000040 you still
get a base 8 number 8.16.24.32.

Anybody know why, how, when, anybody care? Interesting though. A bit. It
must be late.


Gareth


""Minh Vu"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
002101c04b51$062201a0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:002101c04b51$062201a0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
how is it calculate ?  It works with win9x too.

Thanks
"Neil Schneider" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
8uhbqb$ijq$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8uhbqb$ijq$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
No, not IPv6, just an regular IPv4 address written partially in hexidecimal.
Works on NT/W2K, don't know about other platforms.

Neil Schneider


""Minh Vu"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
014501c04b37$8fc4d5a0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:014501c04b37$8fc4d5a0$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
Do anyone saw this number as IP before?
0100.10.41.0142

Sure, you can ping that number which will convert to IP address:
64.10.41.98


is that the IPv6 IP address ?

Thanks


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