On Wed, 2011-01-05 at 12:14 +0100, Carlos E. R. wrote:
What for? What do I gain? All sites I use are on IPv4.
You probably mean: "All the sites i used _untill now_, are on IPv4" Did you ever consider the possibility that there might me a site tomorrow that is ipv6 only?
Look, my printer has IPv6. I can not even connect to it on that! It could be well that I am clueless.
That's for the brave at heart.
I'm refered to a google page instead of my printer. So, linux is not IPv6 aware >:-)
Then you probably use SuSE_6.3 or even much older...
Yes, I'm playing thick-head here. Just to show you that I have no idea of IPv6 - and I'm a trained network installer, I have a Cisco diploma somewhere >:-p
(we saw nothing of IPv6 in the training)
Well, it is even in the current BSDA-exams
With a tunnel broker, you set up your computer or firewall to use 6in4 tunnelling. This adds a 20 byte IPv4 header to the IPv6 packet, for transport over the existing IPv4 network. The tunnel broker then removes that header and puts your IPv6 packet on the IPv6 internet. You can do this with Linux, Windows, Mac and other. There are also many routers that support this.
Which I would have to pay. :-(
If you are into Cisco, you wil probably be overpaid...
No, thanks.
Cisco routers certainly do, as do certain D-link models.
Cisco for a home ADSL? Way over the roof in price.
No, let my ISP do the change, they will tell me what I have to do. And possibly they will pay for the change, being their "fault" >:-)
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