iljitsch.com

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Hi, I'm Iljitsch van Beijnum. These are general neworking-related posts.

When do we turn off IPv4?

Over on gogo6.com (through the .vantronix newsletter) Bruce Sinclair asks and attempts to answer the question When do we Turn Off the Lights on IPv4? They actually did a poll on gogoNET. The answers form a beautiful bell curve...

Full article / permalink - posted 2013-08-21

NAT64 @ World IPv6 Launch

My presentation slides for my lightning talk about NAT64 at the World IPv6 Launch event in Amsterdam.

Permalink - posted 2012-06-06

→ RFC 6384: An FTP Application Layer Gateway (ALG) for IPv6-to-IPv4 Translation

The File Transfer Protocol (FTP) has a very long history, and despite the fact that today other options exist to perform file transfers, FTP is still in common use. As such, in situations where some client computers only have IPv6 connectivity while many servers are still IPv4-only and IPv6-to-IPv4 translators are used to bridge that gap, it is important that FTP is made to work through these translators to the best possible extent.

Permalink - posted 2011-11-05

→ Cutting the cord: how the world’s engineers built Wi-Fi

About the history and the inner workings of IEEE 802.11, written with Jaume Barcelo.

Permalink - posted 2011-10-10

Speed matters: how Ethernet went from 3Mbps to 100Gbps… and beyond

Story about the history (and future) of Ethernet, published by Wired and (first) on Ars Technica.

Permalink - posted 2011-07-16

→ Speed Matters: How Ethernet Went From 3 Mbps to 100 Gbps… and Beyond

"In 30 years, Ethernet conquered networking and accelerated from 3Mbps to 100Gbps—and Terabit Ethernet might not be far off." My Ars Technica feature about the history (and some future) of Ethernet, reprinted by Wired.

Permalink - posted 2011-07-16

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