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- 8. February 2012: Student Sends MIT (Admission) Letter to Near Space (Amateur Radio involved...)
- 8. February 2012: Amateur Radio: KP2Z Puerto Rico on 80M, ND State on 40M for Worked All States
- 6. February 2012: Official 2012 Honda CR-V Game Day Commercial - "Matthew's Day Off" Extended Version
- 6. February 2012: Madonna ~ Halftime Super Bowl XLVI (dolby surround) - 720P High Def Video
- 6. February 2012: Amateur Radio - working on WAS - Worked All States ... only 2 left! (48 States Confirmed)
- 6. February 2012: Sub-Tropical System Could Be Forming Near Cuba ... S. Florida area to be affected
- 6. February 2012: The NYG's won Superbowl, Madonna was awesome, Mathew Broderick Commercial ...
- 6. February 2012: Weather over S. Florida tries to satellite block my SuperBowl Sunday
- 5. February 2012: New Country, Amateur Radio Contact, TA3HM - Izmir, Turkey
- 4. February 2012: 2012 version 4.0 Livewire Access Controller FB-10 (former product known as Livewire Service Selector)
- February 2012
- January 2012
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
IP version 6 (IPv6) “stuff” is heating up. About 2 years worth of IPv4 IP Address Space is remaining. You can try IPv6 Now!
Here is an interesting, easy to understand, video I found on Youtube, about IPv6. It’s not the seminar or webinar that I talk about below. It’s much easier to understand than that was. They talked with a lot of cable Internet terms on the webinar that I viewed, that your average viewer of this blog just would not understand or appreciate. And it was bent a lot toward Cable Internet Service Providers (technical people.) Anyway the above video is both interesting and easy to understand for a MUCH viewer audience. So… I liked it, and embedded it on here. Go and thank the guy that made it!
I watched and listened to an IPv6 Deployment seminar online the other day, brought to me by Communications Technology, one of the email newsletters that I get.
Comcast Cable is on roll in deploying IPv6 in their Cable Modem Internet Networks not only in their command and control structure but out to the actual homes and businesses. They are asking for Beta Testers … so if you are *that* type of person and you are on Comcast you might jump in there and ask to be a Beta Tester of Ipv6 out to the premises.
For those that don’t know, a lot of the issue of IPv4 Addresses running out, was mitigate by NAT - Network Address Translation. That’s that “192.168.x.x” stuff that you see on your computers coming from your router that gets the *real* Internet IP Address. This however just delayed the problem, so now Government Networks, Satellite and Cellular Networks, and your local Comcast Cable Network (and others) are scrambling to put IPv6 into play. After all *I know* from experience, having worked in a Cable Company / ISP - what’s involved in getting an ARIN allocation of huge chunks of IPv4 Address Space. You have to do a *lot* of figuring and managine of your IP Space and some cool paperwork using CIDR notation (Subnetting, Supernetting, IP Address Aggregation) … you know? Fun stuff.
Awhile back I posted an article on my main web site on IPv6, so I’ll recall that for you for reference. http://www.marinetelecom.net/ipv6-addressing.html <– There it is.
So with IPv6 there will be enough IP Addresses for your dog, your cat, you goldfish, your toaster, your living room carpet, and more to get an IP Address. No NAT. “It can all be over right now, no more running up Curahee, no more Captain Sobel”
:-) <– That was joke, a movie quote coming from the Band of Brothers series that was released on HBO and now on DVD.
Back when I wrote that article page … I was running Freenet6 on my Linux Server and sharing IPv6 connectivity to my local network by running what I had to run to do that… But I just revisited this and Freenet has been taking over, apparently, from where it used to be run by Hexago Company, to now being GogoNet or Gogo6 … (google.com that…) And although it seemed to me to be a bit more confusing (now they a “Community” on there. Wowww a Community … yawn…. ho hum) to find the Freenet6 stuff. But it’s still there. And you can get a Windows version and actually (almost) trivially get an authenticated Freenet6 Account (you can have an anonymous one as well, but not as capable, and not as educational) … whereby you can run the program on Windows, get logging in (authenticated mode), get a - what is it - /56? IP Block Allocation and “Serve” that to other computers on your LAN (Local Network.)
Pretty soon IPv6 will be the *norm* and we will all be on Ipv6 IP Addresses. For now, on some ISP’s, asking to be on IPV6 is like asking for Free Internet. On my DSL I doubt that AT&T would do that without charging me heaps of extra money (like they did with Business Class DSL.) The IPv4 “space” on the Internet will still be available, no matter what, because once IPv6 becomes the norm, then our ISP’s will have us Natively on IPv6 and will “Gateway” us to anything IPv4 that we need to get to.
So what _Am_ I going on about???? Well there are a FEW places on the Internet, The IPv6 “space” that you can only go on if you have IPv6 Connectivity. It’s not a LOT. So mainly this is good for educational purposes … to learn about IPv6, the Numbering Scheme of it, How it Works Dot Com, and prepare for the Judgement Day coming soon when IPv6 will hit us all like A Ton of Bricks. Don’t wait for the last minute!
By the way, IPv6 is built-in to Windows Vista, Windows 7, Mac OS X, Linux, and other modern Operating Systems. IPv6 is available in Windows XP by typing “ipv6 install” in a CMD prompt window. You can remove it from Windows XP by typeing “ipv6 uninstall” - just in case you have any problems that seem to come from it. I seem to remember some issues in the past with IPv6 on my computers and onboard some motor yachts. Some conflicts of some sort occurred. So make sure that you know how to take it back out if you need to.
Soooo. I am running on Windows 7 64-bit - Gogo Client Utility (The HOME version) for test and educational purposes. And I signed up for an account with Freenet6 in order to get a username and password, and be able to request a “/56″ IP Address Block Allocation. *A hell of a lot easier than, as an ISP, getting an Ipv4 “/20″ allocation!!!! And by turing on a simple feature “Home Access” - I was able to share my IPv6 Connectivity with the whole premises here. So every machine on my network automatically gets IPv6 Address, and my machine as the Router, and can access IPv6 Internet Resources. Pretty cool, huhhh????
P.S. Oh, your phones, your PDA’s, on Cellular, etc. will be using Ipv6 more and more as time goes on … if they aren’t using it already.
P.S.2. - Here is another *good read*:
http://itexpertvoice.com/home/troubleshooting-ipv6-on-windows-7-and-why-its-worth-the-bother/
You may not need IPv6 right now, but you will soon. Fortunately, Windows 7 supports the advanced networking protocol better than any other Windows version. But that doesn’t mean you should rely on the default IPv6 configuration.
If you’re an old tech coot like me, you know that the “Imminent Death of the Internet” has been predicted for decades now. While the Internet is in no danger of dying anytime soon, the days of relying on the old core TCP/IP protocol IPv4 do appear to be coming to an end.
After years of delaying it with techniques like Network Address Translation (NAT), we’re finally really running out of IPv4 addresses. Major ISPs like Comcast, and Web sites such as YouTube now support IPv6. This time around, IPv6 really is getting attention in corporate networks and the Internet. Fortunately for the enterprise desktop, Windows 7 is also ready.
Early Windows versions of IPv6 were, ah, crude. Though that’s not to say that Windows 7 does a perfect job with IPv6 even now. Certainly, the people who appear to have IPv6 connectivity but no network access have learned this the hard way.
(more of that… at the link just given above)
P.S.3. - Another *interesting read*:
http://youtube-global.blogspot.com/2010/02/youtube-calls-on-ipv6.html
* I’ve always had an interested in “telephone stuff” which is why my web site has “telecom” in it. My old: http://www.marinetelecom.net/page-2.html shows some of that interest - as well as other interests I have had over the years.
Friday, February 5, 2010
YouTube Calls on IPv6
The first telephone numbers in the latter part of the 19th century were short and simple, made up of no more than a few digits. Calls would be routed through operators and these operators would then manually patch these calls into the lines of their intended recipients. As more and more people got telephones, the length of telephone numbers grew from three to four to seven and then eventually to 10 digits and beyond. Today, cities like Manhattan have been forced to have multiple area codes (917, 646, 212, 347, etc.) and if you want to dial outside of your country, add on a few more numbers.
So what does this history lesson have to do with YouTube? IP (the Internet Protocol) is the protocol used to communicate data across the Internet in the same way telephones connected conversations over a century ago. Each connection has an IP address that works like a telephone number. Just like telephone numbers, these IP addresses need to grow to accommodate all the new people coming online. The problem is that IPv4, the current version of the Internet protocol, uses a 32-bit address and those addresses are running out of space — fast. In 2000, Internet users had consumed 50% of IPv4 address space. Today, IPv4 has less than 10% of addresses available. When address space runs out, users will have to share addresses, because there won’t be enough to go around.
But there is hope. IPv6 has a vastly larger address space (128-bit) and allows everyone to have an incredibly large number – 2^64 or more — of personalized IP addresses for all their devices (think of it as having a whole telephone exchange in your home). Not having to share IP addresses is good for users because it means better, more relevant information can be delivered to them whenever they want it. It’s a win for openness and new applications because any device can connect directly to any other device on the Internet. It’s even a win for security, because it’s harder for hackers to find your computer and attack it. But up until now, IPv6 still hasn’t gotten as much traction as IPv4. And content creators and users have yet to adopt it on a wide scale.
Since the very first announcement of ipv6.google.com (IPv6 connection required; if you don’t have it, ask your ISP to deploy it), we have been committed to supporting IPv6 and have steadily added IPv6 support to more and more services. The service most requested to have IPv6 support has unquestionably been YouTube. Given all of this, we’re proud to make YouTube available over IPv6 and to begin streaming videos from a select number of sites worldwide to our Google over IPv6 partners. With YouTube on board, we now have a significant amount of content delivered on IPv6 and a real audience/traffic for it. This is a good day for YouTube, our users and for an open and accessible Internet.
IPv6 by Johannes Ullrich - Part 1
IPv6 by Johannes Ullrich - Part 2
—
Alan Spicer (Radio Amateur KA4UDX)
http://www.marinetelecom.net - http://www.wifiyacht.net
+1 954 683 3426
communications (at) marinetelecom.net
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