there is covered area can it be calculated in usable area
A usable synonym would be small, and an antonym would be wide.
* Usable area refers to the area within the suite that the tenant has exclusive use of. * The rentable area is greater than the usable. It takes into account a share of the common areas of the building that the tenant shares with other tenants. These areas include a share of corridors, lobby and washrooms that other tenants use. * In simple terms, the usable area is the size of the tenant's private space while the rentable area is the area on which rent is charged. The landlord has the right to recover rent on all the area in the building including shared spaces- corridors and washrooms are not free!
A valid credit card number is a card that is recognized as real and usable. An invalid card is either expired or falsified.
host cell
The host range is 192.168.10.193 - 206; total usable hosts =14.
0001 0110 001 is the first valid host address of 193.168.22.1.
254
62 hosts.
network: 172.16.2.128 Broadcast: 172.16.2.255 usable host range: 172.16.2.129 thru .254
usable water
Yes, usable is an adjective to describe a noun as able to be used; for example usable information.
If you aren't subnetting, then the host range for this network would be: 190.254.0.0 - 190.254.255.255 The above shows the IP address range, but not all addresses would be usable (mostly the first and the last addresses would probably be not assignable to a device).
Usable is an adjective used to describe something/someone.
That leaves us 5 bits for the host (32 - 27 = 5); the size of the network is 25 = 32 IP addresses, that is, addresses 10.150.100.96 - 10.150.100.127. The first and last address are not usable (can't be assigned to hosts), which leaves us with addresses 10.150.100.97 - 10.150.100.126.That leaves us 5 bits for the host (32 - 27 = 5); the size of the network is 25 = 32 IP addresses, that is, addresses 10.150.100.96 - 10.150.100.127. The first and last address are not usable (can't be assigned to hosts), which leaves us with addresses 10.150.100.97 - 10.150.100.126.That leaves us 5 bits for the host (32 - 27 = 5); the size of the network is 25 = 32 IP addresses, that is, addresses 10.150.100.96 - 10.150.100.127. The first and last address are not usable (can't be assigned to hosts), which leaves us with addresses 10.150.100.97 - 10.150.100.126.That leaves us 5 bits for the host (32 - 27 = 5); the size of the network is 25 = 32 IP addresses, that is, addresses 10.150.100.96 - 10.150.100.127. The first and last address are not usable (can't be assigned to hosts), which leaves us with addresses 10.150.100.97 - 10.150.100.126.
"Usable" is spelled as U-S-A-B-L-E.
How many possible host addresses are there in a Class A range?Class A range is 0 - 1270.0.0.0 and 127.0.0.0 are not "routable" IP addresses. One defines all networks and the other is the loopback. We have a total of 126 usable networks and 16,777,214 usable hostaddresses per network.