Talk:Finding Your IP Address

Original comment
Thanks for sharing.Here i wish to add some additional information about ip address. Internet Protocol Address (or IP Address) is an unique address that computing devices use to identify itself and communicate with other devices in the Internet Protocol network. Any device connected to the IP network must have an unique IP address within its network. There are two types of ip address. 1.static ip 2.dynamic ip Static Ip-address: Static Ip-address will not change if you refresh the modem or switch off and on the modem again.It's remains same. Dynamic Ip-address: Dynamic Ip-address will change whenever you refresh the modem a new ip allocated for you...... If you need your computer ip do the following instructions For Windows xp 1.start->Run 2.cmd 3.Type ipconfig 4.press enter You can find your external ip address using any one of the online site .Recently i checked my ip address using http://www.ip-details.com/

Second comment
I've added a header to the original comment, which will allow a Table of Contents to form (for these comments). I also modified the comment, adding HTML so that it doesn't just get rendered as a single paragraph. I also added a hyperlink. All that was done in good faith, as it looks like that is what the original author was intending.

The info on this page may be mostly fine (though did I see something about downloading a program from Softpedia? That seems extremely unnecessary!) I've written about this topic before: [CyberPillar ] [: Getting a system's IP address] documents the same sort of thing, and is documentation that I currently expect to keep updated (and may expand upon in the future, covering more operating systems). I won't mention that on the main content page, simply since I made the ][CyberPillar][ page so I don't want to be promoting my own work on the main Book content page. It looks like this "book" may currently cover more types of systems than what my article does at the time of this writing. Still, I really question whether this topic is sufficiently complex enough to warrant trying to have an entire Wikibook dedicated to the topic. An article? Sure, I've done that. But a book? 174.21.246.238 (discuss) 08:02, 30 December 2014 (UTC)