Quote:
Originally Posted by
aweir
Will it make home networks harder to setup?
Nope, just the addresses will be longer- infact it'll probably be easier depending how home router manufactures decide to package the software.
Seriously go read the RFC for IPv6, there are multiple benefits- it's also a good read
Some of the best ones below,
IPSec security built in
Address auto-configuration (IPv6 protocol can assign hosts IP addresses without the need for a dedicated DHCP server)
Theoretically more efficient packet processing for ISPs and routing devices in general. By using multicast as a forwarding method it'll massively cut down on the amount of spurious unneeded broadcast traffic on network segments.
The most contentious for me is the fact that we will be able to re-establish the end-to-end principle, I'm not so sure this is a good idea however computer science theorists/purists will argue otherwise.
EDIT: Sorry for the double post, but the exhaustion of IPv4 space is still massively overhyped.