I understand the general concept of CIDR and how the prefix and suffix bits work, and I generally understand that you can take an address say:
73.132.68.12/24
There are 24 prefix and 8 suffix bits. The network address corresponding to this would be:
73.132.68.0
as the suffix is all zeros.
Going further, you can break this address down into more subnets by extending the network/prefix a little further. This is where I get a little confused though.
If I extended the prefix by 4, then only the last 4 bits would have to be 0 for the network address of any of the subnets. Does this mean that I have to use the first 4 bits in the last byte to identify the subnets? Here's what I mean in example...
73.132.68.16 --> subnet 1 with final byte as 0001 0000
73.132.68.32 --> subnet 2 with final byte as 0010 0000
73.132.68.48 --> subnet 3 with final byte as 0011 0000
etc.
Would this be an appropriate way to subnet the address ?
Is there a better way?