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Many people are intimidated over the IP subnetting part of the Network+ exam. But now that you know about binary math, youamp;#39;ll find that the process is relatively straightforward. And you should very easily be able to calculate all of these IP subnet values. Letamp;#39;s look at an IPv4 address. Weamp;#39;ve become very accustomed to seeing these. So Iamp;#39;ve put one IP address here at the top-- 192.168.1.131. And just underneath this is the binary representation of that. You can see each one of these sections is an eight bit block. We often refer to this as a byte or even an octet. That means that an IP version 4 address is 32 bits long, or four bytes in length. An IP version 4 address in each one of these blocks, because it is eight bits-- that means that the values you can have here would range between 0 and 255. None of these numbers can exceed 255 because weamp;#39;re dealing with eight bits in this single block. Letamp;#39;s now break down what an IP address really