Terry Lambert wrote: > > > 1) Machines do not ship with it enabled by default; a > Windows user has about as much probability of doing > the necessary work to enable it as they do of making > something other than Internet Explorer their default > browser. > > 2) You have to go to a command line prompt and issue a > cryptic command to enable it at all. Err, not at all. You go to install/remove additional windows components (I do not recall the exact phrasing) and select IPv6. > 3) When you enable it, you get a huge scare warning about > it being experimental. I didn't. :-) And the bastard stopped doing A queries. :-) > 4) 95% of the existing Windows machines in the world are > not running XP, and the last time I saw the code for > Windows 95/98 IPv6 support was the Summer of 2000; they > took it down from their site after that. > > 5) AFAIK, it still doesn't support key exchange, so you > have to manually configure the keys, which is a really > difficult and tedious process, and won't work with any > embedded device that depend on key exchange working > (e.g. thing NAT gateways, etc.). > > 6) The last time I tried the "experimental" version, it did > not correctly interoperate with AIX or FreeBSD, but worked > fine Windows-to-Windows, so they've done *something* to it > to embrace and extend it. > > In short: "It's not ready for Prime Time". > > -- Terry -- Daniel C. Sobral (8-DCS) Gerencia de Operacoes Divisao de Comunicacao de Dados Coordenacao de Seguranca VIVO Centro Oeste Norte Fones: 55-61-313-7654/Cel: 55-61-9618-0904 E-mail: Daniel.Capo_at_tco.net.br Daniel.Sobral_at_tcoip.com.br dcs_at_tcoip.com.br Outros: dcs_at_newsguy.com dcs_at_freebsd.org capo_at_notorious.bsdconspiracy.net Never go to a doctor whose office plants have died. -- Erma BombeckReceived on Fri Aug 08 2003 - 02:01:48 UTC
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.4.0 : Wed May 19 2021 - 11:37:18 UTC