Anyone watch the news? People are dying from being inactive, bloated, lazy, fatasses. Our lifetime expectancy would probably increase by 10 years, with existing technology, if we simply took care of ourselves.
I cringe thinking about owning another device that I have to recharge and strap to my body.
Stuff that needs to be unloaded off my person as I walk thru the door at the end of a work day: Cell Phone, Pager(s), Laptop, Keys, Wallet, Garage Door Opener, Coffee Mug, Spare Change (sometimes), daily junk mail.
The same reason we don't route multicast. Its mostly unsupported by upstream ISPs.
Suppose I did route v6. What would a customer do with an IPv6 block if I handed it to them? What applications work with it? Most aren't even knowledgable to keep RPC/SQL ports firewalled.
I work for an ISP. One of my responsibilites is to manage our IP space (~/16). I am tired of dealing with IP justification, ARIN and customers who want to have public IPs on their office printer farm. Double and yes, sometimes triple NAT in order to get customer networks to talk to monitoring infrastructure. The sooner IP6 gets here the better.
Spanning Tree is pretty robust protocol. Problems usually arise when admins get impatient with convergence times and start messing with the timers.... or enabling features like portfast, backbonefast and the like.
Seems like there would be limited demand for this product offering. Not may companies are hard up for computing resources... or network resources for that matter. They would probably be better off re-introducing the "turbo" button on their PCs and charge you for the right to push the button.
Anyone watch the news? People are dying from being inactive, bloated, lazy, fatasses. Our lifetime expectancy would probably increase by 10 years, with existing technology, if we simply took care of ourselves.
I cringe thinking about owning another device that I have to recharge and strap to my body.
Stuff that needs to be unloaded off my person as I walk thru the door at the end of a work day:
Cell Phone, Pager(s), Laptop, Keys, Wallet, Garage Door Opener, Coffee Mug, Spare Change (sometimes), daily junk mail.
Argh!!
The same reason we don't route multicast. Its mostly unsupported by upstream ISPs. Suppose I did route v6. What would a customer do with an IPv6 block if I handed it to them? What applications work with it? Most aren't even knowledgable to keep RPC/SQL ports firewalled.
I work for an ISP. One of my responsibilites is to manage our IP space (~/16). I am tired of dealing with IP justification, ARIN and customers who want to have public IPs on their office printer farm. Double and yes, sometimes triple NAT in order to get customer networks to talk to monitoring infrastructure. The sooner IP6 gets here the better.
Don't Fords end up in the junk yard in a couple years anyway?
Spanning Tree is pretty robust protocol. Problems usually arise when admins get impatient with convergence times and start messing with the timers.... or enabling features like portfast, backbonefast and the like.
Seems like there would be limited demand for this product offering. Not may companies are hard up for computing resources... or network resources for that matter. They would probably be better off re-introducing the "turbo" button on their PCs and charge you for the right to push the button.
Where would the trial be for getting assaulted by one of these devices? Source of or at the receiving end of the bitch slap?