TCP/IP

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'''[[TCP/IP]]''' (Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol) is the central protocol of the Internet (or actually two protocols, but they're tightly connected and usually discussed together). These protocols form the heart of the Internet protocol stack, which has, in all, between four and seven layers depending on how you count (doesn't Taco Bell have a burrito like that?). IP addresses computers on the Internet by means of [[IP address]]es, which currently come in two varieties, IPv4 addresses (consisting of four bytes worth of numbers generally expressed as a dotted series like 123.45.67.89; this address space is running out due to the vast expansion of the Internet) and IPv6 addresses (long enough to give every person in the world trillions of addresses, which could be needed for all the nanomachines of the future). The address expansion of IPv6 is a useful thing, but it is still taking many years to complete the transition, and most current Internet activity is still in the old address space.
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'''[[TCP/IP]]''' (Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol) is the central protocol of the Internet (or actually two protocols, but they're tightly connected and usually discussed together). These protocols form the heart of the Internet protocol stack, which has, in all, between four and seven layers depending on how you count (doesn't Taco Bell have a burrito like that?). IP distinguishes computers on the Internet by means of [[IP address]]es, which currently come in two varieties, IPv4 addresses (consisting of four bytes worth of numbers generally expressed as a dotted series like 123.45.67.89; this address space is running out due to the vast expansion of the Internet) and IPv6 addresses (long enough to give every person in the world trillions of addresses, which could be needed for all the nanomachines of the future). The address expansion of IPv6 is a useful thing, but it is still taking many years to complete the transition, and most current Internet activity is still in the old address space.
  
 
== Links ==
 
== Links ==

Revision as of 14:29, 6 October 2013

File Format
Name TCP/IP
Ontology
Released 1982

TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol) is the central protocol of the Internet (or actually two protocols, but they're tightly connected and usually discussed together). These protocols form the heart of the Internet protocol stack, which has, in all, between four and seven layers depending on how you count (doesn't Taco Bell have a burrito like that?). IP distinguishes computers on the Internet by means of IP addresses, which currently come in two varieties, IPv4 addresses (consisting of four bytes worth of numbers generally expressed as a dotted series like 123.45.67.89; this address space is running out due to the vast expansion of the Internet) and IPv6 addresses (long enough to give every person in the world trillions of addresses, which could be needed for all the nanomachines of the future). The address expansion of IPv6 is a useful thing, but it is still taking many years to complete the transition, and most current Internet activity is still in the old address space.

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