| progmetalaax 2003-09-21, 3:45 pm |
| ahhh another cet21 test. I remeber It gave the answer with no explanation what so ever. This is where Net+ comes in handy (also on the last question u had)
default gateway interfaces can end in this way if the networks subnets are a host ID set (1-254) futhure divided. The answers are network prefixes, another way of represent a group of IP's on a subnet. It does get confusing but the main thing about this prefixes is that the format never has a 0 or 255/some number, because any host ID that end in 0 or 255 I believe is a broadcast and is not accepted by client IP's. If u want more detail on this concept look at the Net+ (better yet Cisco subnetting), but just remember since an IPclient cant end in 0 or 255, Network ID .1/number is correct. So cert21 answer ACE is correct. Hope this helps  |