Little Interest In Next-Gen Internet
Ant wrote in to mention a Computerworld article that is reporting on the slow acceptance of the IPv6 version of the internet. From the article: "Information Technology (IT) decision-makers, in U.S. businesses and government agencies, want better Internet security and easier network management. However, few see the next-generation Internet Protocol called IPv6 as helping them achieve their goals, according to a survey released Tuesday by Juniper Networks Inc."
just doesn't have the same ring to it.
Meh.
Translation: "There's a marketing job to be done"
I thought education was for important things which you need, and marketing was to convince you to use products and services?
My 3D Texturing Skinning work (under construction)
Which is why IPv6 isn't going to be in full effect until 2025. They figured that acceptance would be slow. The fact is, at this point, people don't need IPv6. But when the numbers start to run out, they'll be clamoring for it.
I have a minimal writeup on my blog here. It states where I got my 6to4 tunnel from, how to activate the tunnel (in FreeBSD), and the problem I faced when activating the tunnel! All in all, now my webserver answers requests on ipv6!! Check it out! Its very easy, I suggest all geeks at least try this at home. Later tomorrow, once I'm done testing, I will put an extensive writeup on how to make your home network a functioning IPV6 ONLY network (includes: Windows Boxes, Mac Boxes, Linux Boxes, FreeBSD boxes, and OpenBSD Boxes).
For example I am setting up a nature webcam site which will be ipv6 only for exactly this reason.
Until the porn world goes IPv6 only there will be no major rush to upgrade. I really hope that your "nature webcam site" is really nude women running around in the forest or I just don't see it making a difference.
Few articles actually address real IPv6 benefits and instead pull out strawmen about a purported shortage of IP addresses. That's got to be the least significant and least relevant change between IPv4 and IPv6. Maybe that's all the 'journalists' can get their teeny minds around, or maybe it's mandated spin because certain key advertising accounts *cough*MS*cough* aren't looking to be IPv6 compliant any time soon.
Some of the main advantages of IPv6 over IPv4 are:
- quality of service
- simplified headers
- multicasting
- security (that's certainly buzzword compliant, why is it never brought up?)
- autoconfiguration
- improved routing
- authentication
Japan and China are already rolling out IPv6 networks. Since the article specifically points out the U.S., maybe it's time that U.S. businesses start getting technical news from sources other than their MS account representative.Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
NAT is not good enough.
Too many things have to work around NAT problems.
I run a small network and all the users running filesharing programs have problems. I have to give them each a port.
What happens when more than one of them wants to run server for a protocol which needs a specific port? SMTP?
Why shouldn't people be able to have full IP connectivity? NAT does not provide that, and UPNP is not enough to fix that.