Post your IPs
Ill start:
192.168.1.1
Post your IPs
Other urls found in this thread:
169.254.51.183
Come at me, hackers.
127.0.0.1
2001:0db8:0000:0000:0000:ff00:0042:8329
2001:db8:0:0:0:ff00:42:8329
2001:db8::ff00:42:8329
All 3 of these are the same address, yay IPv6
192.168.1.20
10.10.10.11
Hey that's my IP!
10.0.0.1
wanna play DOOM?
damn now I want to play DOOM 3
>Still using 192.168.X.X in 2018
SHIGGY
Yes!
10.0.0.100
man that is epic!
more just annoying as fuck.
For the layman knowing that
2001:0db8:0000:0000:0000:ff00:0042:8329
and
2001:db8::ff00:42:8329
are identical addresses is surely only going to cause confusion.
hey it's job security for network guys
204.34.154.59 better not hack me unless you're prepared to die
10.0.0.2
lol this thread is epic!
epic for the win
>APIPA
>on the internet
10.13.37.1
192.168.1.2
10.101.0.1
No place like home
192.168.2.3
>his IP address is an URI containing a domain
high tech bro
I have
127.12.34.56
65.246.72.71
Simply eric
45.3.119.25
203.0.113.11
8.8.8.8
setup DDNS so I can connect to my OpenVPN server, feels good
192.168.1.110
1.1.1.1
67.190.144.51
Can you find the hidden treasures?
Or break into my network?
you forgot 2001:db8::ff:42:8329
Fo
37.2.2.145
My nizzle
you can't remove trailing zeroes
I mean in theory you could have your router PAT the 169.254.0.0/16 net... it would be utterly retarded to configure it this was though since literally all routers have DHCP.
I'll post yours.
127.0.0.1
phoneposter confirmed?
No I didn't, can't remove 0's after other stuff, only ones that come before.
So the octet :0db8: can become :db8:, but the octet :ff00: must remain :ff00:
2.0.1.8
If you flip the numbers it looks like "shizzle". Such is fo shizzle my nizzle sizzurpin dis drizzle Jow Forums
>There are people posting on Jow Forums right now with a single WAN IP.
/28 get at me.
I have a /56 IPv6 address allocation.
8.8.8.8
My shop at work controls several /16 IPv4 nets.
As a whole organization, we have several /8s.
Take an easy guess who I work for.
257.342.234.-1
verizon?
577.32.5.653
that'd be my guess as well, I know verizon is hoarding a shit ton of IPv4 addresses.
back in 2011 this was said about them
>estimates that Verizon has received more than 19 million IPv4 addresses from the American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) in the past three years.
For ~5 million FiOS customers, and a few million business customers, they surely have plenty of IPv4 addresses to go around, especially since that 19M number is only from ~2009-2011, they already had significant IPv4 addresses allocated before that point as well.
Verizon is a tier 1 ISP, they're quite literally as big as it gets when it comes to that stuff
192.168.188.48
please don't steal it
Keep in mind Verizon also has a *ton* of mobile customers that need to be routed to the internet.
The answer is actually the DoD... I work on the team that handles routing for all the Air Force bases.
For some reason, every fucking workstation, router interface, etc is assigned a publicly routed IP. Not really any purpose because all internet connected systems are behind like 5 firewalls, and other networks aren't even connected to the internet.
mine is
0.0.0.0
>Keep in mind Verizon also has a *ton* of mobile customers that need to be routed to the internet.
VZW switched to IPv6 awhile ago.
Pretty sure when they installed LTE back in 2010/11 they made sure it was all IPv6 because at the time they knew they needed to preserve the IPv4 addresses for their landline customers. (mainly businesses)
118.193.48.138
2400:51c0::7484:5ea:9855:19cc
Never knew that... also never been willing to fork out the cash to be on Verizon's cell network.
AT&T's prepaid has been much cheaper and works everywhere I need it to.
>1 byte=8 bits
triggered
10.13.3.37
I can't believe there are still plebs on class Cs
8.8.8.8
Yeah, most mobile operators use IPv6 at this point due to IPv4 address depletion.
On that note, Verizon FiOS still hasn't switched over to IPv6 yet, and is still only serving up IPv4 addresses, though a few customers are reporting live IPv6 connections as of a month ago, so they'll probably be doing a wider-rollout over the coming months.
Why do you have more than 254 devices at home?
God I wish I still had FiOS.
We had it at my parents house, moved out to Colorado for muh job and now just have cumcast with their blazing 5 Mbps upload.
They're not even laying fiber or w/e in new residential developments. You can get comcast cable internet or Centurylink ADSL, which caps out at like 15/1.
rackspace does the same thing presumably so they know what the IP is no matter what in the event we do something retarded with the private addresses
>God I wish I still had FiOS.
So does everyone who's had it and now can't get it.
imagine being one of the poor fucks in Florida who were forced to switch off of Verizon FiOS and onto Frontier FiOS. Frontier has basically destroyed the customer trust Verizon built down there with FiOS.
100.64.55.104 COME AT ME!
>implying my network consists only of devices in my home
:lol-at-poorfag.jpg:
... why are you running remote devices as part of your LAN at home?