Blue Torch Fab Intern Vote For Me!!!!!

Dude, you're ahead by six, right now!
Came from what, a hundred or more behind?
NEVER underestimate the worth of a NAXJA membership.
 
up by 20, need some more
 
lets get some more people over there to vote, and please don't try voting under several user names because they will be checking IP addresses
 
I am not sure what that IP thing is but tried to have it explained to me and am still dumfounded. Probably why I play with jeeps and not computers. I am confused by it. My friend jon goes to St Joes college in Philly I built him a Yj and he's a pirate member so he voted for me. He also has a few frat members that are into it that also voted. He said they are all on a T1? line at the school and that will show the same IP or if he was on my comp at the shop it would be the same IP is that true? I am confused and wouldn't mind understanding this if it can be put in easy terms



Anyways votes only till friday lets get our votes in if we haven't yet. I appreciate this from the bottom of my heart. This site has definetly shown the most support for me and I'm grateful for this.
 
An identifier for a computer or device on a TCP/IP network. Networks using the TCP/IP protocol route messages based on the IP address of the destination. The format of an IP address is a 32-bit numeric address written as four numbers separated by periods. Each number can be zero to 255. For example, 1.160.10.240 could be an IP address.
Within an isolated network, you can assign IP addresses at random as long as each one is unique. However, connecting a private network to the Internet requires using registered IP addresses (called Internet addresses) to avoid duplicates.

The four numbers in an IP address are used in different ways to identify a particular network and a host on that network. Four regional Internet registries -- ARIN, RIPE NCC, LACNIC and APNIC -- assign Internet addresses from the following three classes.

Class A - supports 16 million hosts on each of 126 networks
Class B - supports 65,000 hosts on each of 16,000 networks
Class C - supports 254 hosts on each of 2 million networks
The number of unassigned Internet addresses is running out, so a new classless scheme called CIDR is gradually replacing the system based on classes A, B, and C and is tied to adoption of IPv6.
 
Every computer that communicates over the Internet is assigned an IP address that uniquely identifies the device and distinguishes it from other computers on the Internet. An IP address consists of 32 bits, often shown as 4 octets of numbers from 0-255 represented in decimal form instead of binary form. For example, the IP address
168.212.226.204

in binary form is

10101000.11010100.11100010.11001100.

But it is easier for us to remember decimals than it is to remember binary numbers, so we use decimals to represent the IP addresses when describing them. However, the binary number is important because that will determine which class of network the IP address belongs to. An IP address consists of two parts, one identifying the network and one identifying the node, or host. The Class of the address determines which part belongs to the network address and which part belongs to the node address. All nodes on a given network share the same network prefix but must have a unique host number.

Class A Network -- binary address start with 0, therefore the decimal number can be anywhere from 1 to 126. The first 8 bits (the first octet) identify the network and the remaining 24 bits indicate the host within the network. An example of a Class A IP address is 102.168.212.226, where "102" identifies the network and "168.212.226" identifies the host on that network.

Class B Network -- binary addresses start with 10, therefore the decimal number can be anywhere from 128 to 191. (The number 127 is reserved for loopback and is used for internal testing on the local machine.) The first 16 bits (the first two octets) identify the network and the remaining 16 bits indicate the host within the network. An example of a Class B IP address is 168.212.226.204 where "168.212" identifies the network and "226.204" identifies the host on that network.

Class C Network -- binary addresses start with 110, therefore the decimal number can be anywhere from 192 to 223. The first 24 bits (the first three octets) identify the network and the remaining 8 bits indicate the host within the network. An example of a Class C IP address is 200.168.212.226 where "200.168.212" identifies the network and "226" identifies the host on that network.

Class D Network -- binary addresses start with 1110, therefore the decimal number can be anywhere from 224 to 239. Class D networks are used to support multicasting.

Class E Network -- binary addresses start with 1111, therefore the decimal number can be anywhere from 240 to 255. Class E networks are used for experimentation. They have never been documented or utilized in a standard way
 
Did you copy and paste that or type that from scratch. Reading that just made me feel dumb. But I'm laughing about it. Still lost but I guess I'm not meant to know. Thats what the mods are for hopefully all those vots are legit. I think the amount of places Fullsizexj has been plugging if one person from each place voted all of the votes can be accounted for. Thanks so much. C-ya
 
Fullsizexj said:
I thought everybody knew that stuff, pretty common knowledge,
O.K. I googled and copy and pasted

AHAHAHAHA



well on a bad note someone contacted me that an Ip address was shared and 42 votes were not legit. NOt blaming at all but please don't do that. Lets win this for the unibody fair and square. I'm 38 behind which isn't a huge deficite. Lets make our time count and win this. I'm out to get some votes. Thanks
 
binks off road said:
AHAHAHAHA



well on a bad note someone contacted me that an Ip address was shared and 42 votes were not legit. NOt blaming at all but please don't do that. Lets win this for the unibody fair and square. I'm 38 behind which isn't a huge deficite. Lets make our time count and win this. I'm out to get some votes. Thanks

Wow, thats a huge number, someone really wanted you to win. I'm a little disappointed myself. Were you the only one who was taxed with "illegal" votes? I find that number to be a little rediculous.
 
I dont' know. I was pissed off the bat because I thouoght I was getting blamed but he said they were'nt blaming me just telling me there were some non-legit votes. Thats fair to me I don't cheat and if I felt as though I won because of cheating it wouldn't make the trip worth it. So fire in some real votes and get me there. I wanna see if Dustin and Bender can keep up with my redbull habit.
 
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