On Apr 16, 2015 8:53 AM, "Michael Leone" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> On Wed, Apr 15, 2015 at 3:56 PM, Ben Scott <[email protected]> wrote:
>>  If you disable it only in your test environment, you're making your
test environment significantly different from your production environment.
Why bother testing if you're not testing what you're actually going to do?
>
> IPv6 is disabled in production. That's why it's disabled in the test
environment.

So then the "unsuppoeted by Micrsoft" and "weird problems" paragraph
immediately preceeding applies.

I'm not a fan of Microsoft's design decision here, but it's their product.
They make the rules.  We have to play by their rules with their product.

If it bothers you that much, Linux and Mac OS X fully support an IPv4 only
environment.  Heck, Linux supports configurationations without a network
stack.

But if you're going to run Windows, you should do it right.

-- Ben

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