That said, I expect to be disappointed.
I had really hoped that IEEE would have made support for jumbo frames an absolute requirement for all gigabit ethernet. But nooooo, its an option so we missed out on that opportunity.
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Website: http://hallambaker.com/
On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 11:24 AM, Fleischman, Eric <eric.fleischman@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Indeed, it has been remarkable how poor the sales pitch has been to resource-poor operations that are expected to adopt this, even after all this time.
>> On 10/11/2010 8:25 AM, Joel M. Halpern wrote:
Without getting into the question of whether your suggestion would have helped
anything in terms of transition and interoperability, it shares one major flaw
with the path we did adopt.>> There is no incentive to spend resources to get there.<snip>> Specifically there is a cycle of ungranted requests. Alice has no incentive to upgrade her infrastructure because she cannot use any new feature until Bob upgrades. Meanwhile Bob has no incentive to upgrade ahead of Alice.> Mere exhortations from the great and the good have very limited effect.The "elephant in the room" which this discussion hasn't considered is "Why would a widget maker want to spend money, thereby reducing their bottom line, to upgrade their network to IPv6? Applying traditional business risk/reward analysis, is there even one real *business advantage* to justify such an expense? If there isn't any, then IPv6 would only rationally be deployed by such an end user if it were both transparent and free.
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Website: http://hallambaker.com/
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