Thursday, January 5, 2012

Don't worry about IP's, Just know the basics for Link Building

People throw around terms like IP Addresses, Nameservers, hosting, ftp, and the like. In this piece we are going to cover IP Addresses. IP Number stands for Net Custom Address and is at present made from four 'octets ' or numbers parted by a period.

Each octet might be a number from zero to 255 Some examples of valid IP addresses are - 1.123.150.243, 35.35.36.10, 240.216.1.80 There's also a higher standard for IP addresses that is slowly being launched called IPV6 ( IP version 6 ). IPV6 numbers look different from our existing IP addresses. The new IP system is designed to give us enough IP addresses so we cannot run straight out of unique IP addresses any time in the forthcoming future. So why do we need IP addresses? Reasonably simply, an IP number is like your physical home address. It designates a selected P.C that is hitched up to the web. Each Computer attached to the web has an IP. This is necessary for it to send and receive data.

In the present set of IP addresses, going from left to right, the initial 'octet ' is the most broad, with each successive octet getting more grained or explicit. 134.125.244.1 - is as express as it is simple to get and appertains to a specific Personal computer You can often hear different classes like class A, class B, and class C debated when handling IP addresses. Below I've given some examples of what people are talking about when talking about classes. Class A 134.XXX.XXX.XXX 240.XXX.XXX.XXX 22.XXX.XXX.XXX Class B 134.254.XXX.XXX 36.36.XXX.XXX 36.37.XXX.XXX Class C 254.210.135.XXX 36.36.1.XXX 36.36.2.XXX It's continually simplest to think about IP addresses as physical addresses, with the Class An octet being like country, Class B, being a city in that country, Class C being a street in that city, and the last octet being a selected house on that street. Link building or having links from a different set of IP's is helpful, but the best it let others naturally link to you.

Thus by looking above you could be in a position to see that when some talks about a Class An IP they are talking about the initial 'octet ' and when they're exclaiming that two IP addresses are on different Class A subnets, it basically means the initial set of numbers are dissimilar. So as an example 255.123.124.255 34.123.124.255 Are on different Class A's. While what's left of the IP addresses are the same, because they are on different Class As, they are Far apart ( remember, Class An is the most broad ). The same thing applies for Class B. When anybody announces that two IP addresses are on different Class B's it fundamentally means the the second octet's of each IP is dissimilar. The IPs might be on the same Class An or it might be different, but the second Octet of numbers is dissimilar. To better explain...look below.

255.123.124.255 255.34.124.255 34.34.124.255 In the example, the first two IP addresses are on the same Class A, but different Class B's. The third IP number, has the same Class B number ( 34 ), but as the 1st Octet is dissimilar, it is also on a different Class B ( as with physical addresses, two states can have the same city names, but they are still different cities ). For class C we are having a look at the third octet. 255.123.124.255 255.123.34.255 34.42.124.255 Again, the initial two above are on different Class C's, while the third has the same class C number as the first, nonetheless it is first and second octets are dissimilar, so it's also on a different Class C. I am hoping the above makes since to you. I have tried to give tons of examples to indicate no matter what your tech background is.

The good news is, that you barely have to deceive with IP addresses, all you have to do is natural, and manual link building, not let someone try to fool you with different class sets of IPs.

Infrequently your host will set all this up for you without it being important to understand any of it. I am able to cover some of the other basics like site hosting accounts, nameservers, and the like, but rather than concentrate on different class IP's always make sure to do your link building right.

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