Author Topic: Are you ready for IPv6?  (Read 5342 times)

is this like the modern version of Y2K or something

also 10/10 for IPv4, but 0/10 for 6

What the forget. They have to go and make everything better by making everything confusing. What is the purpose of this "IPv6" anyways? What happened to "IPv5"?

IPv4: 10/10
IPv6: 0/10

why is everybody so stupid

is this like the modern version of Y2K or something
No, it's called ipv4 has a limited amount of addresses and ipv6 is the solution.

What the forget. They have to go and make everything better by making everything confusing.
If we stick with ipv4 then people will be stuck without IPs and thus unable to connect to the internet.

No, it's called ipv4 has a limited amount of addresses and ipv6 is the solution.
yeah, but if anybody's incompatible they wont be able to do anything on the internet
like that Y2K thing, except their computers will still work or whatever

what was Y2K anyway, wasn't it something about the computers' clocks?

what was Y2K anyway, wasn't it something about the computers' clocks?
Everyone believed it was something about files saved at different times or something.

Also, I am an idiot that read this...

...instead of this...

...for the IPv6 test.
« Last Edit: May 30, 2012, 01:02:30 PM by ShadowYoshi294 »

Everyone believed it was something about files saved at different times or something.

wrong

yeah, but if anybody's incompatible they wont be able to do anything on the internet
like that Y2K thing, except their computers will still work or whatever

what was Y2K anyway, wasn't it something about the computers' clocks?

the fact that years were usually stored with two digits (i.e. the 19 was prefixed automatically, 19xx)
suddenly year 2000

whoops

the fact that years were usually stored with two digits (i.e. the 19 was prefixed automatically, 19xx)
suddenly year 2000
whoops
so, did anything actually happen?
I was alive for this but I was like
three
I'm pretty sure most of us were anyways though, except people like coolio and lambro and chappers

wrong

the fact that years were usually stored with two digits (i.e. the 19 was prefixed automatically, 19xx)
suddenly year 2000

whoops
next year2k will be on 2035, where the binaries will go to 11111111111111111111111111 and woops.

next year2k will be on 2035, where the binaries will go to 11111111111111111111111111 and woops.

what

no lol

I don't really get Y2K. there was a setting in windows 98 that allowed for you to set the prefix, the 19XX part.
???
so, did anything actually happen?
I was alive for this but I was like
three
I'm pretty sure most of us were anyways though, except people like coolio and lambro and chappers
well, see
people thought that because of the issue, the computers would turn alive and become AI and take over the world, despite the fact that they were computational pieces of stuff.

I don't really get Y2K. there was a setting in windows 98 that allowed for you to set the prefix, the 19XX part.
???

What if they were doing math and such
Like
1900 - 1999

-99 year difference

why is everybody so stupid
Shut up and stop being a ass about it, and explain it to them.

next year2k will be on 2035, where the binaries will go to 11111111111111111111111111 and woops.
It's 2038 and the number is 11111111 11111111 11111111 11111111

So, basically ISP just assigns you IPv6 address and IPv6 will start working? (If the result is 10/10 and 0/10)