Re: IPv6 addresses really are scarce after all

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Keith,

perhaps, but one might also reasonably expect 2^0 networks to be
insufficient.


At the risk of repeating myself, I respectfully disagree. Given that you
can reasonably build a flat subnet of 1000 hosts today, it does
not seem like an unreasonable entry point.  Mom & Pop 6-pack
have one computer.  George & Jane Jetson only have 6.  Why
does the entry point have to be more than two orders of
magnitude above the common case?


so are prefix allocations to users of less size than a /48. but if ARIN
can't follow the specifications that everyone else uses, this should
call their competence into serious question, and maybe IANA should find
someone else to dole out IPv6 prefixes for that part of the world.


Once again, that's the MSO's doing that, not ARIN.

Tony

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