I think you're crazy if you say moving to IPv6 is crazy. With virtually every computer being part of a network now, I feel being able to directly access them is important. Many pieces of software, such as remote desktop, are hard to use when your computer is assigned a private IPv4 address. Also, with the increased use of networks and the internet in many different types of software (many games, network printers, etc.) we sometimes need or want to know the IP address and not need to worry about NAT.
Re: This article.
Latest software headlines from Network World:
Quick fix for Firefox 3 bug with Yahoo Mail
Continuent launches open-source database scale-out stack
Wider implications of the Red Hat breach
|
Does Verizon's Voyager stack up to the iPhone? |
|
|
5 IT skills that won't boost your salary
[1,407]
Women 4 times more likely than men to cough up personal info
[589]
Japan's 10 funniest tech-related commercials [Videos]
[407]
Throwing away a promo CD is "unauthorized distribution"?
[1,265]
Adults too quick to dismiss educational video games
[682]
Attack of the iPhone clones [Slideshow]
[578]
10 things IT needs to know about AJAX
[1,258]
This Year's 25 Geekiest 25th Anniversaries [Slideshow]
[409]
|
|