On 16 Sep 2021, at 8:58 AM, Eliot Lear <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> John you were not the "sole network operator" on the directorate.[1]   
> https://www.sobco.com/ipng/directorate.minutes/bigten.5.19.94 
> <https://www.sobco.com/ipng/directorate.minutes/bigten.5.19.94>
Eliot -

You are referencing the minutes of a rather large workshop (the Big10 confab) 
that had far more attendees that the IPng Directorate itself.

The list of directorate members is contained in RFC  1752 "The Recommendation 
for the IP Next Generation Protocol” in Appendix B, and is listed below for 
reference –

Appendix B - IPng Area Directorate

   J. Allard - Microsoft           <[email protected]>
   Steve Bellovin  - AT&T          <[email protected]>
   Jim Bound  - Digital            <[email protected]>
   Ross Callon  - Wellfleet        <[email protected]>
   Brian Carpenter  - CERN         <[email protected]>
   Dave Clark  - MIT               <[email protected] >
   John Curran  - NEARNET          <[email protected]>
   Steve Deering  - Xerox          <[email protected]>
   Dino Farinacci  - Cisco         <[email protected]>
   Paul Francis - NTT              <[email protected]>
   Eric Fleischmann  - Boeing      <[email protected]>
   Mark Knopper - Ameritech        <[email protected]>
   Greg Minshall  - Novell         <[email protected]>
   Rob Ullmann - Lotus             <[email protected]>
   Lixia Zhang  - Xerox            <[email protected]>

> And I'm not saying that there weren't arguments, but I am saying that nobody 
> said, “wait for something better.”  Rather, everyone was arguing for their 
> preferred approach out of the ones I mentioned.
> 

Also incorrect. The preferred transition approached of the recommended IPng 
candidate (SIPP) was IPAE, and that was actually dead-on-arrival.   Per the 
same recommendation RFC -

   The biggest problem the reviewers had with SIPP was with IPAE, SIPP's
   transition plan.  The overwhelming feeling was that IPAE is fatally
   flawed and could not be made to work reliably in an operational
   Internet.

This is what lead to the conception of the infamous Simple SIPP Transition 
(SST) approach as a stand-in Transition plan in order to allow for a decision 
to be made – and creation of IETF working groups to develop the respective 
transition mechanisms.  At the time of the IPng decision there was actually 
_no_ “transition plan” – as the very mechanisms that were to be used (and that 
were eventually discarded as unworkable) were just placeholders for future IETF 
work.

Thanks,
/John

p.s. My views alone.  Warning: contents may be hot / burn hazard



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