ack, before you nitpickers slam me, that entire private range block
ends in 172.31.255.255, not 172.31.0.0 as I stated previously.

Brian "Sonic" Whalen
Success = Preparation + Opportunity


On Thu, 24 May 2001, Brian wrote:

> Given that the very last bit from a binary perspective, it cannot be a
> network address, unless you wanna split hairs and call /32s networks.
> Note that is a reserved for private lan ip, 172.16.0.0-172.31.0.0 is the
> reserved block this is part of, that particular /21 would be
> 172.16.0.0 to 172.16.7.255.
>
>
> Brian "Sonic" Whalen
> Success = Preparation + Opportunity
>
>
> On Thu, 24 May 2001, CCIE TB wrote:
>
> > Hi Group members,
> >
> > I came across a question in a Transcender exam in which they give a
network
> > address as 172.16.0.1/21. This address is given by an ISP to your
network.
> > Is that address a possible network address? It looks to me as a host
> > address. What I'm missing here?
> >
> > Regards to all
> >
> > Adia
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