• fluffman86@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      How hard would it have been to just add another octet or two? I like using my 10key and if I have to type letters for an IP address it’s a bad system.

      • aPearson@lemmy.mykhoury.com
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        1 year ago

        You’d still need to update and replace every system a packet would touch. Why just add another 8 or 16 bits and make it where we’d have to go through this entire painful process again? IPv6’s design was “we never want to do this again”.

        An example of this “we never want to do this again” is only 1/8 of the v6 address space is currently marked usable for allocation. We have 7 more chances to change allocation methods without having to update or change any system.

      • Adama@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Not to mention that we can “visualize” the segments and networks by the numbers. Makes it easier to recognize, as an analogy,

        This state, that city, this road, that house.

        Versus ipv6. Of course there’s so much space in v6 that it isn’t an issue except it’s such a pain to work with for people who tend to think in ipv4 octets and bit masks

      • barsoap
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        1 year ago

        There’s way more to ipv6 than additional octets. I don’t run ipv6 on my wlan (pretty much only for my mobile phone) because I can’t be arsed to wrap my head around ipv6 autoconfig and NAT (or rather not NAT) whereas setting up dhcp is a breeze.

    • I'm Hiding 🇦🇺@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      Unless I’m mistaken, it’s also impossible for many - myself included. My ISP doesn’t provide me with a public facing IPv6 address.

    • bfg9k@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It really isn’t, but vendors often make the IPv6 config optional and often don’t have an auto-config wizard for IPv6 like they often do for IPv4.

      Take Ubiquiti EdgeOS, setting up a PPPoE with IPv4 has a dedicated GUI wizard that shows up when you first log on, but IPv6 config is all confusing CLI commands.

      IPv6 is haaarrrrrd because vendors are lazy.