Telecom Foundations
Every device on a network needs a unique address to send and receive data, and the Internet Protocol provides exactly that. IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses written as four decimal octets like 192.168.1.1, giving roughly 4.3 billion possible combinations. Because that supply is nearly exhausted, IPv6 was created with 128-bit addresses written in hexadecimal groups such as 2001:0db8::1, offering a virtually unlimited pool. In mobile networks, your phone receives an IP address when it establishes a PDU session, assigned by the Session Management Function and delivered through the User Plane Function.
Try these first, even if you're not sure. Guessing primes your brain.
Why does every device need its own IP address?
Billions of gadgets are online. Why was IPv6 invented?
Airport WiFi assigns your laptop an address automatically. How?
Answer all 3to continue — it's OK to be wrong.