iljitsch.com

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

→ 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

→ RFC 6146: Stateful NAT64: Network Address and Protocol Translation from IPv6 Clients to IPv4 Servers

This document describes stateful NAT64 translation, which allows IPv6-only clients to contact IPv4 servers using unicast UDP, TCP, or ICMP. One or more public IPv4 addresses assigned to a NAT64 translator are shared among several IPv6-only clients. When stateful NAT64 is used in conjunction with DNS64, no changes are usually required in the IPv6 client or the IPv4 server.

Permalink - posted 2011-04-27

→ RFC 6147: DNS64: DNS Extensions for Network Address Translation from IPv6 Clients to IPv4 Servers

DNS64 is a mechanism for synthesizing AAAA records from A records. DNS64 is used with an IPv6/IPv4 translator to enable client-server communication between an IPv6-only client and an IPv4-only server, without requiring any changes to either the IPv6 or the IPv4 node, for the class of applications that work through NATs. This document specifies DNS64, and provides suggestions on how it should be deployed in conjunction with IPv6/IPv4 translators.

Permalink - posted 2011-04-27

→ How Egypt did (and your government could) shut down the Internet

Ars looks at how Egypt "turned off" the Internet within its borders and whether that could be accomplished in countries like the US and western Europe. The Internet is surprisingly hard to kill, but if a government is willing to power down routers, turn off DNS, and kill interconnects, it can be done.

Permalink - posted 2011-01-30

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