Another measure of the size of the IPv6 address space... Back on World IPv6 Day 
in June 2011, Dartware had a barbecue. (Why? Because the burgers had 128 
(bacon) bits and we served IP(A) to drink :-) You can see some photos at: 
http://www.networkworld.com/community/blog/scenes-ipv6-day-barbecue

But we came up with another interesting measure for the vastness of the IPv6 
address space: 

If an IPv4 hamburger patty has 2^32 (4.2 billion) unique addresses in its 1/4 
inch thickness, how thick would an IPv6 hamburger be (with 2^128 unique 
addresses)? 

The answer is... 53 billion light-years. 

It's straightforward unit conversions. There are 2^96 IPv4 Hamburgers at a 
quarter-inch apiece. That's 2^96 inches/4 (2^94 inches). Switching to decimal 
units, 1.98x10^32 inches; 1.65x10^27 feet; 3.13x10^23 miles; and then 
continuing to convert to light-years.

A good tool for this kind of wacky unit conversion is Frink 
(http://futureboy.us/fsp/frink.fsp?fromVal=2%5E94+inches&toVal=lightyears), 
which can do this in one shot. Simply enter:

From: 2^94 inches
To: lightyears

and you'll see the answer!

Rich Brown                    richard.e.br...@dartware.com
Dartware, LLC                 http://www.intermapper.com
66-7 Benning Street           Telephone: 603-643-9600
West Lebanon, NH 03784-3407   Fax: 603-643-2289

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