Yes. They are normally called octets. Octals implies octal numbers, when the numbers between the periods in a traditional IP address are decimal numbers.
--Sorry to quibble.
>>>Well... If you are running a class C network with a netmask of 255.255.255.0, then the first 3 octals have to be the same for the person to be on the same subnet. For instance, 192.168.0.x, where 'x' is any unique number between 1 and 254.
>>
>>"octals"?
>
>An IPv4 address has 4 octals. For instance: 192.168.0.1. The 192 is an octal, the 168, 0, and 1. Each section is limited to the numbers 0 thru 255, or 2^8. This is because IPv4 is 32-bit addressing.
>
>Make sense?
>
>j
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