Ned writes: > Nor did I say you could. The point is that > how IP addresses are used varies. My point is that you want to uniquely identify every machine in the world using IP, then every machine must have a unique IP address. If you are using names instead of IP addresses, and you still want to uniquely identify every machine in the world, then every machine must have a unique name. > Why is this so hard for you to understand? I understand it perfectly. What I am illustrating is how poorly people understand the real problems, how careless they are when reading, and how readily they confuse one problem with another. This is why fixed address spaces will be exhausted, no matter how large they are, and this is why TLD management will continue to be a mess, no matter what changes are made.
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Registries Creating Tower of ... Anthony Atkielski
- RE: Competing Domain-Name Registries Creating Tower of ... Erkki Kolehmainen
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Registries Creating Towe... Anthony Atkielski
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Registries Creating ... Randy Bush
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Registries Creat... Anthony Atkielski
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Registries C... ned . freed
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Registr... Anthony Atkielski
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... Kevin Farley
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... ned . freed
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... Anthony Atkielski
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... Dave Crocker
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... Anthony Atkielski
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... Dave Crocker
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... Dave Crocker
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... Paul Ebersman
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... R. A. Hettinga
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... Mark Durham
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... Anthony Atkielski
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... Valdis . Kletnieks
- Re: Competing Domain-Name Reg... Dave Crocker