On 10/3/19 13:13, Mark Andrews wrote:

On 4 Oct 2019, at 4:35 am, Seth Mattinen<[email protected]>  wrote:

On 10/2/19 15:03, Naslund, Steve wrote:
In my experience, the biggest hurdle to installing a pure IPv6 has nothing to 
do with network gear or network engineers.  That stuff I expect to support v6.  
This biggest hurdle is the dumb stuff like machinery interfaces, surveillance 
devices, the must have IP interface on such and such of an obsolete appliance, 
etc.  The dumb legacy app that supports the ancient obsolete pen plotter that 
we must keep forever, etc.

Using the plotter example, why is it obsolete and must be replaced if it still 
works? It's a waste of money to dump fully functional hardware because 
software. The argument to justify its replacement needs to be something along 
the lines of the new plotter will output faster and save X hours a day which is 
equal to Y hours of time over a year. Not that the new one supports IPv6 and 
yeah that's about it. Oh the new one also supports TLSv1.3 to make sure your 
plots can't be intercepted by your cube neighbor as you walk across the office.
Firstly adding IPv6 doesn’t remove IPv4.




I know that. What I'm trying to say is that many companies aren't willing to throw away working equipment to gain a nebulous (to them) software feature like IPv6 that doesn't improve on its hardware functional state.

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