On Sun, 23 Sep 2007 15:42:01 +0100 (BST) Jim Jackson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I've been lurking for a while, but this illustrates what I've seen in > quite a few posts on this list and on the ipv6ops list - some people just > know exactly what EVERYONE needs.... > I know what my customers want - and I only operate a network because I have customers who'll pay me to do it. If I don't know what my customers want, I won't have them because I won't be giving them what they want. The very large majority of my customers aren't engineers, so they don't find technical complexity interesting. They just want it to work, and they want it to work as cheaply as it can. Do a survey if you like. Ask people (not just engineers) which option they prefer in any situation, the hard one or the easy one. The majority will pick the easy one, and it's usually the simpler one. My customers might not understand what fixed length interface ids are. However, what they will understand is that if a 10 minute job could be made 5, and I spend that saved 5 minutes on something else for them that's also a need, they'll say, "we'll go with the simpler and cheaper option for this problem." > > So what's best for the IETF's end-users? Simplicity, because it's > > cheaper to buy, to configure and to fix. Universal fixed length > > interface IDs are simpler. > > ...and so the inference is that everyone MUST have this option. Yep, in particular when this thread is trying to change 10 years of specified protocol and implementation. It's too late for that. IMHO, the only way Brian would be able get this changed would be to use IPv6 as the basis for IPngng, and start writing IPngng drafts. -------------------------------------------------------------------- IETF IPv6 working group mailing list ipv6@ietf.org Administrative Requests: https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ipv6 --------------------------------------------------------------------