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Guy Harris (talk | contribs) →Addressing: The computer on which I'm typing this has at least two MAC addresses (Wi-Fi and Bluetooth); servers might, for example, have several Ethernet adapters. MAC addresses are a property of NICs, not computers. |
Guy Harris (talk | contribs) Update link for "data". |
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{{Computer architecture bit widths}}
{{short description|discrete values integer in computer architecture}}
In [[computer architecture]], '''48-bit''' [[integer (computer science)|integer]]s can represent 281,474,976,710,656 (2<sup>48</sup> or 2.814749767×10<sup>14</sup>) discrete values. This allows an [[Unsigned integer|unsigned]] binary integer range of 0 through 281,474,976,710,655 (2<sup>48</sup> − 1) or a [[Signed number representations|signed]] [[two's complement]] range of -140,737,488,355,328 (-2<sup>47</sup>) through 140,737,488,355,327 (2<sup>47</sup> − 1). A 48-bit [[memory address]] can directly address every byte of 256 [[Terabyte|terabytes]] of storage. 48-bit can refer to any other [[
==Word size==
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