| yeah or just what about an article or even a whole book on the subject of: "You're gonna move your home network to ipv6, here's what you need to know to not f&^k up hard and get pwned" At the level like we know for ipv4. Right now, I actively disable ipv6 in devices on my network because I don't have a clue about how it all works. Am I making something addressable from the public internet? Am leaking every mac address I have? So much more I'm sure I havent even considered. Then when you look at ipv6 tutorials you see nuts things like each octet containing a zero value can be shortened to just a single zero :00000000: becomes :0: ok fine, but consecutive octets of zero are removed so :00000000:00000000: becomes :: swallowing a delimiter so programming this stuff you can't even just split on the delim and /know/ what octet is where. Now maybe theres a good reason for that but where is the explanation? Not in any of the tutorials that have to explain how this stuff works rather than something, you know, useful. As presented it's pure additional, utterly meaningless, learning overhead. So yeah. I'm too stupid to run ipv6 and I know it. But I'm not nearly as stupid as those who claim it's ready for prime time because it damn well isn't. Anyone thinks it is. Link the document with a time estimate on running a home network with ipv6 knowing what you need to know (and know already for ipv4) to not do something idiotic. In this crowd, we'll learn stuff just because it looks cool and you can't reach us? Get outta here. |