{A few short comments rolled into one...}

    > From: Tony Li <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

    > As a practical matter, these things are quite doable.  

Tony, my sense is that the hard part is not places *within one's own
organization* where one's addresses are stored, but rather in *other
organizations*; e.g. entries in *their* firewalls. Can those with
experience confirm/deny this?


    > From: Jeff McAdams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

    > the sentiments against PI space in IPv6 are very ISP-centric 

If the system routing (which is not, after all, the property of any one
organization) collapses, it's not just the ISP's who will suffer.


    > From: Marshall Eubanks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

    > the routing tables do not care if you have PI or PA space, just
    > whether it is announced or not. If you are already announcing PA
    > space, and getting into the DFZ, it does not harm the tables if you
    > change to PI space.

Yes, but the whole point of PA space is that generally organizations using
them *don't* each have a separate entry in the DFZ; with PI space, *every*
organization *does*.


    > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Arnaud Ebalard)

    > let's just stop using the 3 letters word. It does not exist anymore.

Yes, those shelves upon shelves of 3-letter boxes at all my local
electronics stores don't exist. And all the millions of them deployed in
the network don't exist either. Speaking of "living in that dream
world".... :-)


        Noel

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