On 9/4/23 15:40, Arjen de Korte wrote:
Citeren Shawn Heisey elyograg@elyograg.org:
An interesting read:
FUD.
This document was written something like two decades ago and pretty much all arguments against IPv6 are no longer relevant anymore. In most cases nowadays, the user experience for IPv6 will be far superior over CGNAT connections which unfortunately become the standard due to the increasing cost of IPv4 addresses. Running services over IPv6 may have been experimental and prone with not so fun problems to diagnose in 2013, but today this is no longer the case.
So you're saying that I can change my entire home network to IPv6, eliminate IPv4 entirely, and I will have no problem connecting to sites like bbc.com or cnn.com, which have no AAAA record? My ISP is Comcast, which does support IPv6, though I have it entirely disabled.
If there is a way for an IPv6 computer to connect to websites with no IPv6 addresses, how could it possibly happen transparently?
Thanks, Shawn