A dynamic address is like a special label that changes when something moves, just like your backpack tag changes when you switch seats in class.
Imagine you and your friends are playing a game where you pass around a ball. Each person has a number on their shirt, like a name tag. When the ball comes to you, your number is the address of the ball. But if you move to another spot in the room, your number changes, that’s a dynamic address!
Like a Moving Toy
Think of a toy car on a track. At first, it's at position 1. That's its address. Then it zooms forward and stops at position 5. Now its address is different, it changed because the car moved.
Just like that toy car, things with dynamic addresses can be anywhere, and their label moves with them. This helps computers know where information is, even if it’s not in the same place all the time!
Why It Matters
When you’re playing tag or passing notes in class, your position changes, so does your address! That’s how dynamic addresses work: they help things keep track of each other, even when they move around.
Examples
- A printer in a school gets a new number every day, like how kids get different locker numbers.
- When you log into your home network, it gives you a temporary identity.
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See also
- How Do Computers Know What Time It Is?
- How Can a Single Light Bulb Control an Entire City?
- How Do Smartphones Know When to Switch from WiFi to Mobile Data?
- What are broadcast domains?
- How does the internet actually send data across the world?