If history is any guide the last Cisco boxes I worked on supported various 
flavors of SDLC and pre-SNA IBM comm, DECnet and DECnet LAT, IPX, Burroughs, 
poll select and the only protocol they do not still support is CorvisNet on 
twisted pair. Some of these protocols have not seen the light of day since when?
 
What is a Good CCIE test without arcane SDLC, HDLC and DECnet protocol 
questions.
 
Most SOHO routers use standard or proprietary silicon to do the IP stack or IP 
route assist and when the silicon is available for dual stack in quantity 
10,000 units or more at a reasonable price the SOHO routers will support both.
 
IMHO before Linksys was owned by Cisco, I liked Netgear because there code was 
from Bay networks and had better routing. Finally, when I bought the expensive 
$ 150.00 routers with integral VPN support that was neat.
 
What I would like to see today is SOHO routers that do not interfere with 6 
over 4 transport since my ISP does not offer home DSL termination of v6. Taking 
the silicon in a SOHO and adding 5 to 10 $ US in cost for v6 and multiple that 
by 5 to get a retail price of those features. Then offset that with the 
decrease in silicon size when you add both together with smaller size lines and 
transistors on the chips, I would project SOHO prices of 250 - 350 $ US to 
start with for v4 & v6 and dropping from there.
 
John (ISDN) Lee

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Frank Bulk - iNAME
Sent: Wed 3/12/2008 4:06 PM
To: nanog@merit.edu
Subject: IPv6 on SOHO routers?




Slightly off-topic, but tangentially related that I'll dare to ask.

I'm attending an "Emerging Communications" course where the instructor
stated that there are SOHO routers that natively support IPv6, pointing to
Asia specifically.

Do Linksys, D-Link, Netgear, etc. have such software for the Asian markets?

Furthermore, he stated that networking equipment companies like Cisco will
be moving away from IPv4 in 5 years or so.  This is the first time I've
heard this posited -- I had a hard believing that, but he claims it with
some authority.  Anyone hear anything like this?  My own opinion is that
we'll see dual-stack for at least a decade or two to come.

Frank



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