On 29/06/06, Eugen Leitl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I presume that 7.9 * 10^28, or 2^96. That wouldn't be reasonable, because IPv6 only has 2^128 addresses. I do have a /48 from SixXS myself, though unused.
Well, I'm curious why is it that Google's owning 7.9 x 10^28 addresses considered unreasonable, seen in the light of this quote from Wikipedia's article on IPv6: "IPv6 supports 3.4 x 10^38 addresses, or 5 x 10^28(50 octillion) for each of the roughly 6.5 billion people alive today." Seems like Google hasn't even got the full share due to Brin/Page. Binand
