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Last Available IPv4 Blocks Allocated

stoborrobots writes "Following on from APNIC's earlier assessment that they would need to request the last available /8 blocks, they have now been allocated 39/8 and 106/8, triggering ARIN's final distribution of blocks to the RIRs. According to the release, 'APNIC expects normal allocations to continue for a further three to six months.'"

7 of 312 comments (clear)

  1. Egypt ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Egypt has just given up theirs ...

  2. IANA's final, not ARIN's final by Spazmania · · Score: 5, Informative

    triggering ARIN's final distribution of blocks to the RIRs

    I think you mean triggering IANA's final distribution. ARIN is one of the 5 RIRs who will receive a final /8 from IANA.

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  3. Re:So the question is... by sjames · · Score: 5, Informative

    Y2K was perfectly legitimate. It was only through heroic efforts that programmers were able to overcome years of managerial negligence and get the changes made in a knick of time. As is typical, since the herculean effort caused nothing to happen the world yawned and assumed the geeks were just moaning over nothing all along.

    In this case, it's not a flag day where what worked a second ago no longer does. It's more along the line of pain slowly creeping up on you day by day until one day you realize it's actually excruciating.

    It's been building for a few years, but few have seen the pain. In the '90s when you wanted a class C allocation, just ask and it was yours. Since then, the standards for justification have gotten tighter and tighter until you almost have to either exaggerate of consult a fortune teller to fill them out appropriately.

    It WILL get worse, and it will ramp up quickly, but it won't be like Y2K might have been.

    On a side note, a Y2K related issue (leap day implementing the 4 year and 100 year rule but not the 400 year rule) did result in a significant nuclear event at a Japanese fuel reprocessing facility.

  4. An IPv4 address enters a bar and says... by c0lo · · Score: 5, Funny

    "A strong CIDR please, I'm exhausted"

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  5. Re:where are IPV6 routers and modems?? by The+Psyko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Uh, IPv6 autoconfiguration?

    And who renumbers? No one should be typing in IPs anywhere anymore. DHCPv6 and DNS and now you're done.

  6. Re:240/4 subnets by Kjella · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Except they were not stupid and they were not dumb. You look at your megabytes and gigabytes of RAM and think of course that's stupid. But a current era machine would be something like the Apple II with 4 kB - 4096 bytes - of RAM, where it really, really matter if an IP address takes up 4 bytes or 8 bytes. Or if you use 2 or 4 digits to store the year. By the time TCP/IP became official, cutting edge machines like the IBM PC and Spectrum Z80 had 16 kB.

    You must remember that TCP/IP was designed only around the time people started to imagine the possibility of a personal computer, and even then it was for the few and rich. That we'd all get together in one big network was even further out, I used to dial BBS for many years before I got on the Internet, even though it already existed as such.

    Even today when there's far more people and people are much richer than 30 years ago there's only about 2 billion people on the Internet, even if you assumed a PC for everyone we'd still be good for another while. But I have a PC at home and at work and in my pocket and it all adds up. But who had that crystal ball in the late 70s/early 80s and what if they did?

    Sure, you could have just picked some impossibly huge number that'd obviously be enough for everything. But it would have had a huge and immediate impact on memory consumption and cost there and then. We're not talking about short sighted businessmen that only care about the next quarter here. We're talking about things that could only be a problem decades down the road if this becomes a megahit. Sure it's shitty for us, but that's not their fault. Particularly when people have been waving the warning flags for years and everybody's happily ignored it until we hit the brick wall.

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  7. Re:O M G by FoolishOwl · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you read the headlines carefully, you'd have noticed a pattern:

    2001: IPv4 address space will run out in ten years.
    2002: IPv4 address space will run out in nine years. ...
    2010: IPv4 address space will run out next year.
    2011: Last Available IPv4 Blocks Assigned. IPv4 address space will run out later this year.