[ppml] IPv6 flawed?
Colin Alston
colin at thusa.co.za
Sun Sep 2 17:55:59 EDT 2007
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On 02/09/2007 06:08 Michel Py wrote: > - As it turned out down the road, the multiple-addresses-per-host are > too much of an administrative overhead. > > So we're in a situation where the only remaining real reason to upgrade > to IPv6 is IPv4 address space exhaustion, while IPv6 still does not have > hugely popular features such as NAT and no equivalent either. > > Technically, I consider NAT more flawed than IPv6. Nevertheless, NAT has > addressed market needs, while IPv6 is a solution without a market. While I agree with a number of areas lacking in IPv6 implementation (DHCPv6 for example which is a bit broken on every implementation I've touched), I don't quite grok how that is a flaw in the protocol itself or how it influences adoption (aside from the argument that it has no market yet). Mostly though, I don't understand the idea that peoples hardware hardware capabilities (router memory) and software implementations (NAT etc) are a fixed constraint that policy should work around. -- Colin Alston <colin at thusa.co.za>
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