What Is Broadcast Address?
Suppose you are out on an unknown street and trying to find your way to a party you would like to visit very desperately. It is a place marked with balloons, yet you still can't find it. That's why we're here today. To talk about a new feature that is called broadcast addresses, and it makes things way easier for you. Here's how it works: You've got one machine on your network that sends out data packets (i.e., messages or data packets) in the form of an IP address. Now, instead of just sending those packets from one machine, you can send them from multiple devices, even hundreds of machines, at once! That means when we get a bug report from someone who claims their machine is broken. We have no idea what's happening because there is no traceable information about what happened; now, we need to check our logs and see which machine sent out the packet with this particular IP address. Broadcast IP addresses are unique and non-routable IP addresses that accept incoming requests on any network interface. Requests are sent to a broadcast IP address and are received on any network interface. Most Internet Protocol Version 4 (IPv4) networks assign a dedicated broadcast IP address to each network interface card (NIC). When IP classes were designed, certain IP addresses were reserved for specific tasks. Broadcast addressing was developed to facilitate message broadcasting for all network devices. You can use broadcast addressing to send messages to all devices on your local network. It is very useful when you want to let everyone in your home know that dinner is ready or if there's an intruder in your house and you need to tell everyone else what's exactly happening.
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