Troubleshooting the 192.168.2.1 IP Address
ATA CHAPTER 280 MAC
In most cases, you can find the correct IP address printed on a sticker on the back of your device, along with the device’s MAC address, which is a hardware identification number that uniquely identifies each device on a network. The good news is that the manufacturers of devices that rely on private IP addresses don’t expect their users to remember them. As such, you always have to enter “192.168.2.1” into your web browser’s URL field, instead of simply typing “” or something similar. Since private IP addresses are not unique, they don’t have domain names associated with them. In fact, there’s a good chance that it’s in use right now on your own network because the 192.168.2.1 IP address is the default IP address set for many routers, including almost all models from Belkin and some models from Edimax, Siemens, and SMC.īesides routers, the 192.168.2.1 IP address is also readily used by security cameras, smart home appliances, baby monitors, intelligent thermostats, and other connected devices found in modern homes.
The exhaustion of IPv4 addresses has been anticipated since the late 1980s and is the main reason why the IPv4 addresses will eventually be replaced by IPv6 addresses.īecause the 192.168.2.1 IP address is intended solely for private use, it can be used by anyone on a private network without creating an IP address conflict. Private IP addresses, such as 192.168.2.1, were defined by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), a nonprofit private American corporation that oversees global IP address allocation, to delay IPv4 address exhaustion. Ata publishes widely and has recently been included in the world's top 2% of Scientists List in which is ranked #112 from more than 27,000 researchers in the area of "Mining and Metallurgy".192.168.2.1 IP Address and Routers Using It She is an active reviewer for competitive national and international grants and several high impact journals. She is currently editorial board member of Mineral Processing and Extractive Metallurgy Journal and International Journal of Mining Science and Technology, and Member of Standards Australia Committee MN-001-02 (Coal Preparation). In 2011, she was elected to the University of Newcastle’s Emerging Research Leadership Program based on her outstanding research outcomes.
Her work covers all aspects of flotation research, both physical and chemical, from the research and development stage through to the application of research outcomes to the mineral industry, technology transfer, and flotation plant practice. She has been chief investigator on an ARC Centre of Excellence, an ARC Linkage and two ARC Discovery projects, an ARC LIF grant and several industrial projects supported primarily by mineral industry. Prior to joining UNSW, she was a Research Academic at the Centre for Multiphase Processes, the Newcastle University.Īta has been actively involved in fundamental and applied research into multiphase, specifically froth flotation system.
Dr Seher Ata is an Associate Professor in the School of Minerals and Energy resources Engineering and conjoint Senior Lecturer at the University of Newcastle.