On Sat, 2019-10-12 at 11:48 -0700, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> You would only setup bind if you want to use a full domain setup on
> your local network.  Most people have no need of this.

There are other benefits.  Learning DNS (if that's good for you). 
Working around lousy DNS servers from your ISP.  Most things that you
can connect to a LAN will use DNS to resolve addresses, *nearly* most
modern things will use MDNS, a lot of simpler/older things will only
use DNS.

> You probably don't want to maintain a hosts file for all the
> computers on your network, especially if you are using DHCP.

I'd say that unless your IPs are fixed to always be the same addresses
(whatever method is used), using the hosts file will be the cause of
some problems.  Using multiple hosts file (one on each PC) just
increases the work required.

> DNS is generally way overkill and more work to manage.

For most people probably, and using BIND would be.  Though there are
smaller DNS servers that can read your hosts file, then serve that data
to all the other computers on your LAN.

If you have a decent modern router, it may be able to do all of this
for you, anyway.
 
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