Michael - good points all, and saved me typing out a reply. Additionally, using up the RFC1918 space isn't the only problem ... the previously mentioned collision problems between so-called private networks become more and more likely (until almost guaranteed).
Only nit: "In any case, IPv4 is yesterday's news. Nowadays everyone is scrambling to integrate IPv6 into their networks and shift services onto IPv6." ... I would say they should be doing so; I wish more were!! /TJ >-----Original Message----- >From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >Sent: Thursday, August 07, 2008 1:06 PM >To: nanog@nanog.org >Subject: RE: was bogon filters, now "Brief Segue on 1918" > >>Your point seemed to be that >> it is not a large enough allocation of IPs for an international >>enterprise of 80K souls. My rebuttal is: 16.5 million IPs isn't >>enough? > >You don't seem to understand how IPv4 networks are designed and how that >interacts with scale, i.e. the large sprawling networks that international >enterprises have. You don't simply count out x addresses per employee. >Instead, you design a subnet architecture that a) can grow at all levels, >and b) can be cut off the network when you sell off a branch operation or >two. > >This leads to large amounts of IP addresses used up in padding at all >levels, which then leads to these organizations running out of RFC 1918 >space, a more and more common occurence. This, in itself, is a good >incentive to move to IPv6, since the seemingly wasteful subnet architecture >is considered best practice with IPv6, and a ULA prefix or two gives you >lots of space to keep growing. > >> What are we talking >> about then? 100 IPs per person--say each person has 10 PCs, 10 >> printers, 10 automated factory machines, 10 lab instruments, 49 >> servers and the soda machine on their network? > >Nope. We are not talking about people, but about network architecture and >topology. Two people in one office need two addresses. Put them in separate >offices and they need two subnets. Topology dominates the design. > >> I don't think you have that many soda machines. Even on 5 continents. >> Even with your growing Asian market, your suppliers, and the whole >> marketing team. > >I believe the first two companies to run out of RFC 1918 space (or to >project that it would happen) are Comcast, and American cable provider in >one continent, and a Japanese cable provider on a small Pacific island next >to China. > >> //Err. Doing it wrong does not justify doing it wrong. > >Cute sound bites does not make you an expert in anything. > >In any case, IPv4 is yesterday's news. Nowadays everyone is scrambling to >integrate IPv6 into their networks and shift services onto IPv6. > >--Michael Dillon