Feb 3rd
Posted by Michael Trausch and filed under Posts Tagged ‘IPv6

This is the third post in a series on networking. If you are joining late, please read the first and second posts before going forward. Today’s post is going to build on the previous two posts, and we are going to discuss the protection of your network. I’d like to start by saying that network [...]

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Jan 31st
Posted by Michael Trausch and filed under Posts Tagged ‘IPv6

In my last post, I talked about the underpinnings of networking at the lower layers. This post is going to talk about NAT: network address translation. NAT is almost as universal as IPv4 networking, and is used nearly universally on home and small-and-medium-sized business networks—with good reason, too: Having more than one IPv4 address carries [...]

Jan 29th
Posted by Michael Trausch and filed under Posts Tagged ‘IPv6

There are a number of things that I did not address in my post yesterday. My only goal in that post was to illustrate a (rather simple) network that had four subnets. I probably should have posted this article first, but I did not really think about that. This post is going to be somewhat long [...]

Jan 27th
Posted by Michael Trausch and filed under Posts Tagged ‘IPv6

I have been trying to help someone understand a bit more about IPv6 networking and how it would pertain to their network. However, I have had a bit of a problem in the explaining, and I think it is possibly because we have forgotten what the basic components are to an IP stack, insofar as [...]

Posted in The Internet
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May 4th
Posted by Michael Trausch and filed under Posts Tagged ‘IPv6

I am having a little bit of trouble with IPv6. I have a tunnel from Hurricane Electric at this point, but it seems that if I don’t actually have something going across the tunnel for a little while, it stops working until I run a tracepath6 on it again, which is totally weird. I can, [...]

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