> Owen DeLong wrote :
> However, some smart engineer(s) somewhere working in a garage (Steve Jobs and 
> Steve Wozniak) may very
> well develop an IPv4 compatible protocol that can be used along with IPv4 
> making the transition away
> from IPv4 easier and less costly - and if that happens maybe we end up with 
> IPv8.  

<sarcasm>
Paging Jim Flemming !
</sarcasm>

How can you say this ? It can't happen while the ivory tower stands.


> Joe Maimon wrote :
> Call a spade a spade. You are a fan of IPv4 leasing for the same motivating 
> factor as always.
> You believe it will hasten the IPv6 migration by intensifying the misery of 
> IPv4 users.

Indeed. And there are multiple examples of this kind of thing happening all 
over the place for the last 20 years.
Anything that makes IPv4 bad is good for IPv6.

> I believe that is neither inevitable nor justifiable.
> I believe you have not factored the collateral damage properly.

+1
Ironically, DoD (probably the org that wastes the most IP addresses), is a 
victim in that irresponsible behavior. As the multiple efforts to make 240/4 an 
extension of RFC1918 have been torpedoed again and again, their un-announced 
address space has become the de-facto space to hijack when one needs more than 
10/8. The zealots efforts trying to accelerate IPv6 by denying class E to 
become usable has not stopped companies from using IPv4. Instead of using 
240/4, they have hijacked DoD. Irony, because DoD has historically been a 
strong supporter of IPv6 adoption.


> Ronald F. Guilmette wrote :
> We're dying of thirst in the middle of Lake Superior.

Indeed we are, and I'll give two examples :

1. My home setup uses six (6) public IP addresses. I have a /30, that's 4. 
Then, when I plug a wifi bridge on one of the available ports in the back of my 
ISP "router" (for guest wifi, or for things that are known to be full of 
security holes such as all this new IoT buzz), it uses a fifth one. Then, I 
have a VOIP phone (from the same ISP) that uses a sixth address and a separate 
"router", despite the fact that the other router also has two FXS ports for 
phones same as the second router. Solutions have been available for ages to 
avoid that kind of thing. IP unnumbered comes to mind, or giving an address in 
a /24 VLAN instead of a /30.

2. I have remote sites in almost all US states. The majority of these have a 
static IP. Without asking for anything, I systematically get a /29 or a /28, 
because it's a "business".

There is no shortage. There is an organized waste that was used earlier (during 
the free pool days) to justify obtaining more of them and hoard them.
That being said, I'm not sure what could have been done about that.


> Steven Ryerse wrote :
> The other thing that could cause a shift to another IP energy sooner would be 
> interference by say, the
> US Government, requiring in law a shift away from IPv4 - similar to what they 
> did with HD TV signals.

It's already in place. There are various government mandates to enable IPv6. 
Was not more successful than GOSIP or ISDN. People have short memories : there 
was a government mandate do deploy ISDN, and it was such a failure that some 
telcos chose not to deploy. As there was no carrot, the government then tried 
the stick method and set up fines for operators if they did not deploy it, and 
some operators preferred to pay the fines. ISDN was never widely available, and 
it has died before POTS.
IPv6 is just the same as ISDN : I Still Don't Need.

> I prefer to let the market decide when.

So does the market ;-)

> I'm not exactly sure what the price has to rise to before mankind switches to 
> other forms of energy. I paid $75 to fill up my pickup truck today.

I remember filling up for $0.99 a gallon. In California. It now is $4 a gallon 
(in my rabbit hole, not in the bay). In France, it's $7 a gallon. We have not 
stopped driving.

Michel.

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