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network address

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network address

(networking)
1. The network portion of an IP address. For a class A network, the network address is the first byte of the IP address. For a class B network, the network address is the first two bytes of the IP address. For a class C network, the network address is the first three bytes of the IP address. In each case, the remainder is the host address. In the Internet, assigned network addresses are globally unique.

See also subnet address, Internet Registry.

2. (Or "net address") An electronic mail address on the network. In the 1980s this might have been a bang path but now (1997) it is nearly always a domain address. Such an address is essential if one wants to be to be taken seriously by hackers; in particular, persons or organisations that claim to understand, work with, sell to, or recruit from among hackers but *don't* display net addresses are quietly presumed to be clueless poseurs and mentally flushed.

Hackers often put their net addresses on their business cards and wear them prominently in contexts where they expect to meet other hackers face-to-face (e.g. science-fiction fandom). This is mostly functional, but is also a signal that one identifies with hackerdom (like lodge pins among Masons or tie-dyed T-shirts among Grateful Dead fans). Net addresses are often used in e-mail text as a more concise substitute for personal names; indeed, hackers may come to know each other quite well by network names without ever learning each others' real monikers.

See also sitename, domainist.
This article is provided by FOLDOC - Free Online Dictionary of Computing (foldoc.org)
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References in periodicals archive
As is illustrated in this process, on each hop, the local link ID with respect to the MAC address of the last node is translated to the full link ID (the source-destination network address pair) and encoded again with the local link ID with respect to the MAC address of the current node and passed on.
Then he explains such matters as clients and servers, request messages, response messages, header fields, mobility, presence and instant messaging, network address translation, media transport, security, and call flow examples.
It enables end users to retrieve, view, respond, forward voicemails, SMS, MMS, emails and fax from a web portal with built-in network address book to store all their contacts.
In addition to offering firewall services, the Juniper Networks SRX 5600 and 5800 dynamic services gateways deliver key services, such as an intrusion-prevention system, distributed denial-of-service protection, network address translation, dynamic routing and quality of service.
* Provides protection in Enterprise and Service Provider networks that use network address translation (NAT), which can undermine UDP SPR (NAT devices include server load balancers and firewalls)
* Secure remote access for vendors and home based users (including network address translation, secure VPN access, and terminal services)
More sophisticated IVR services even include network address translation (NAT), so storage administrators can selectively link SAN islands without worrying about overlapping domain addresses in each fabric.
Network address translation capabilities for its Inter-Virtual SAN routing (IVR) feature give storage area networking (SAN) administrators the ability to consolidate legacy SANs and share resources across heterogeneous SANs.
On a smaller scale, Linksys--maker of the popular line of consumer-level wireless access point devices uses network address translation to conceal computing activity on the user's side of its router product.
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