Just search "My Ip Address".
Its as easy as that!
ARP
Computers with a specified MAC address can only send and receive information with the IP address it is bound to. To use MAC address binding, you must associate an IP address on the specified interface with a MAC address.
802.11 use MAC addresses, which are the same as IP addresses in some networks
MAC addresses are flat.
It is the IP address you use to connect to the internet. Every computer connected to the internet has an IP address no matter if it is a Windows or Mac computer. To find your IP or iMac address open System Preferences and click on the Network icon. Look on the left and find your Internet connection. Click that and your IP address will appear.
Find Home Menu, highlight & select the Systems Settings Icon, select "Internet Settings", Tap "other information". Tap confirm MAC address, your systems MAC address will be displayed on the server.
Use ip\mac scanner: http://trogonsoftware/trogon-mac-scanner.html
Mac address.
MAC address is fixed to the hardware device (for example a network card) and can not be changed. IP address is assignable. The default IP address for a device can be computed by converting the four right-most numbers of the MAC address from hex to decimal.The MAC address refers to the physical address assigned by the Network Interface Card manufacturer. Example - 10.03.d5.f3.45.fc , where are an Internet Protocol address is given to a computer when it gets connected to the network. Its divided into four parts , separated by fullstops.
yes ......... mac address travels in network instead of ip.
No, MAC addresss and IP address are not the same. MAC addresses are "hard-coded" into the Network Interface Card (NIC) and only ID that individual card. The IP address is software generated and ID's both the network and the individual host.
A MAC address is useful if you want the router to always provide the same IP address to the same network interface, or if you want to provide a service, such as a PXE boot image, to a specific computer regardless of its IP address.