168.l.70.1—contains a common typo. IP addresses use numbers only, so the lowercase "l" should actually be the number "1".
The typo usually involves adding an extra "1" at the end or replacing the number "1" with the lowercase letter "l" (192.168. 192.168.l.70.1
The string "192.168.l.70.1" is a common typo for the IP address 192.168.70.1 Go to Wi-Fi settings
Too Many Octets: Valid IPv4 addresses have four parts (e.g., 192.168.1.70). The string "192.168.l.70.1" has five parts, making it unreadable by any browser or network tool. Open Terminal (Applications >
"192.168.l.70.1" is not a valid IP address, but rather a common typo for 192.168.1.70 or similar local network gateways. In the world of networking, a single misplaced character—like the letter "l" instead of the number "1"—can prevent you from accessing your router's settings or configuring your smart devices. Why "192.168.l.70.1" Doesn't Work
Wait—look closely at that corrected string. 192.168.1.70.1 actually has five sections. A standard IP address (IPv4) only has four sections separated by dots.
netstat -nr | grep default or ipconfig getifaddr en0.