On 2 feb 2011, at 4:51, Dave Israel wrote:

> They were features dreamed up by academics, theoreticians, and purists, and 
> opposed by operators.

Contrary to popular belief, the IETF listens to operators and wants them to 
participate. Few do. For instance, I don't seem to remember your name from any 
IETF mailinglists. (I could be mistaken, though.)

There is a fundamental difference between designing something and using 
something. Both inform the other. But letting users with no design experience 
create something is a short road to failure. (Letting designers run stuff isn't 
much better.)

I always like to say the internet is an infinite universe. In an infinite 
universe, everything that's possible exist. Same in the internet. Think of some 
way to do something, however ill-informed, and someone is doing it that way.

Example: if you give administrators the option of putting a router address in a 
DHCP option, they will do so and some fraction of the time, this will be the 
wrong address and things don't work. If you let routers announce their 
presence, then it's virtually impossible that something goes wrong because 
routers know who they are. A clear win. Of course it does mean that people 
<gasp> have to learn something new when adopting IPv6.

Reply via email to