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by commandersaki
75 days ago
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The key difference, you don't do dual stack, you can incrementally roll it out and get tangible relief, unlike IPv6. The point is less about the technology proposed, but the point that there could be an interoperable version of a next generation IP and IPv4. IPv6 did the braindead thing and completely threw out the idea of transition and interoperability for a clean slate. We're paying for it many decades later. Also, rather than regurgitate a comment, perhaps you should read the article, because that comment misunderstands what is being proposed and thus completely missing the point. |
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> but the point that there could be an interoperable version of a next generation IP and IPv4
Yes, it's IPv6. The thing you linked basically took one of the interoperability methods of v6 and described it in weird terms.
You don't do dual stack with v6 either, unless you want to -- you can do the incremental rollout and tangible relief thing with v6 just fine. (But it turns out most people do want to do dual stack.)