To check your IP address using the Connections list, start by clicking the 'Network' icon from the System Tray, which is at the opposite end of the Taskbar from the Windows button. Click the 'Network and Internet' option and find your computer's network connection in the list.
To check your IP address using the Connections list, start by clicking the 'Network' icon from the System Tray, which is at the opposite end of the Taskbar from the Windows button. Click the 'Network and Internet' option and find your computer's network connection in the list. Clicking the name of your network and pressing the 'Details' button opens the Network Connection Details window. The 'IPv4 Address' heading details your computer's IP address, while 'IPv4 Default Gateway' details your router's local IP address.
MAC address - Media Access Control address. MAC addresses - hardware addresses that uniquely identifies each node of a network. It is assigned by the vendor or manufacturer and saved to the device memory. According to the OSI model it is a second-level address. In IEEE 802 networks Data Link Control (DLC) layer is divided into two sub-layers: the Logical Link Control (LLC) layer and the Media Access Control (MAC) layer.
![Windows Windows](https://cdn.techmesto.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/connection-properties-mac-address.png)
First 3 bytes (or 24 bits) of MAC addresses are known as the Organizationally Unique Identifier (OUI) and usually encodes the manufacturer. MAC addresses usually are written in the six groups of two hexadecimal digits separated by colons (:) or hyphens (-), e.g. E8:04:62:90:07:62, 00-1E-37-18-50 DB. It is also used in another form (e.g. Vendor Cisco) - the three groups of four hexadecimal digits separated by dots (.), e.g. How you can identify MAC address and check MAC adress?
Windows(XP,7,Vista,8): In the command prompt (CMD), type in getmac (or getmac /v /fo list for full info). Linux/Unix: type ifconfig -a. You must be root user or have appropriate permissions. Mac OS X: launch the Terminal and type ifconfig. Cisco: in the CLI type e.g.