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A MAC address is comprised of six octets or in other words, six 8 bit long segments. The first three octets make up the <b>Organisationally Unique Identifier</b> (<b>OUI</b>), i.e., it can be used to identify the device's manufacturer. Refer to the figure below for a visual representation:
A MAC address is comprised of six octets or in other words, six 8 bit long segments. The first three octets make up the <b>Organisationally Unique Identifier</b> (<b>OUI</b>), i.e., it can be used to identify the device's manufacturer. Refer to the figure below for a visual representation:


[[File:Networking_device_nomenclature_mac_address_structure_v1.png|500px]]
[[File:Networking_device_nomenclature_mac_address_structure_v2.png]]


==Teltonika OUI==
==Teltonika OUI==

Revision as of 14:07, 25 February 2019

A media access control (MAC) address is a unique identifier assigned to network interfaces for communications at the data link layer of a network segment. MAC addresses are used as a network address for most IEEE 802 network technologies, including Ethernet and WiFi.

MAC address structure

A MAC address is comprised of six octets or in other words, six 8 bit long segments. The first three octets make up the Organisationally Unique Identifier (OUI), i.e., it can be used to identify the device's manufacturer. Refer to the figure below for a visual representation:

Teltonika OUI

The following MAC addresses belong to Teltonika:

Vendor MAC prefix (OUI) Possible MAC addresses
Teltonika 00:1E:42 00:1E:42:[00:00:00..FF:FF:FF]

External links