There goes my highly successful avoidance of IPv6 since it's creation lol. I now know 99% more about IPv6 than I did before watching. I haven't yet decided whether I'm happy or upset about it lol. Thanks Andy! Very concise to the point and easy to understand.
@@isithardtobevegan53 I was hoping I'd retire or move on before I had to learn yet another protocol that in this case wouldn't be needed for a very long time if ever for my market segment. Especially after private IP addressing became available way back when. Anyone want to learn some IPX/SPX protocol that no longer exists? haha. Anyone remember encapsulating IPX with IP4 to interconnect locations over the Internet as opposed to private leased lines? Jack of all trades now as I literally have to know implement and support every aspect of my customers environments minus the phone system though I do all the networking and security for that as well. Eventually you just don't want to put stuff in your head you really don't need to focus on. But we can't avoid bigtech forcing the issue so learn it I shall though beyond a test lab I'll likely never implement it anywhere unless it's really needed or required. I better be retired by then lol. I think I'm turning into Homer Simpson where a new learned item goes in and something comes out lol. That or I'm just getting old and difficult haha.
You are amazing! Thank you for this explanation. So many of your videos helps keep so many brushed up on what they need to know for their IT Administration work. So very helpful.
There is still so many unanswered questions. I'm an IT professional with 15 years experience and I've never used IPv6 so the statement that you need it is false. When would I actually use this? Yes the main reason for it is because we're running out of IPv4 addresses, but since the introduction of NAT, this isn't an issue. If it wasn't for NAT, we'd have run out of addresses years ago. I run a nationwide company with multiple offices, and unless each office has more than 254 devices, a /24 subnet is enough. I personally use /22 for future proofing. So with IPv6, is not not the case this is used for the routers internet facing connection? Would I have to also use it internally, or can it still be IPv4 internally? All you've done here is explain hex, and that you can squish the address down if it has recurring zero's. What's the standard equivalent of 192.168 you'd use internally? Watching this does not make you an expert as you claim at the end. I am in no position to apply this in the real world at all.
Nice. I'm a little confused you were saying why hexadecimal can't use 16? Didn't make sense that you said "it's the network number" and you use 0 to 15 not 1 to 15 (that would only be Base 15 making no sense)... Here's what I thought you were trying to explain: Base 16 means sixteen symbols possible per digit. Base 10 (we call decimal) has ten symbols '0' to '9', but hexadecimal uses those plus 'A' to 'F' giving you 16 symbols instead. We do it to exactly match 4 bits in binary (Base 2). So the reason you "can't use 16" is because we start at 0 not 1 for the 16 symbols of Base 16. Same reason the decimal symbol cannot be 10 because the ten symbols are 0 to 9.
Awesome presentation, I would like to know about the multicasting and how exactly the data is sent to other devices. I am learning IPV6 outside of any school or formal education. So some questions I have overlook basic concepts I should already have. However I do grasp the protocols usage very well and I am experimenting with what it can do in regards to sending messages to multiple devices. I am certainly looking into specializing into this technology as a professional consultant.
Great video as always, and a good refresher on how to convert decimal base numbers to other base systems: how can you guarantee me that 1,328,334,674 and 1,564,930,436 are indeed distinct numbers? 😁😁😁
Hello Sir, Could you please help me with something about Azure subscription for some reason Microsoft don't accept prepaid or virtual visa cards they need visa cards not prepaid cards, I am living in Libya where banks here give only prepaid visa cards, is there a way I can get azure subscription so I can do practice while preparing for Microsoft certification, thank you
The strange thing they accept debit card for ms365 why is that, How could I ever do my certification if they dnt have a solution even through using Microsoft local partner?, thank you for your reply
There goes my highly successful avoidance of IPv6 since it's creation lol. I now know 99% more about IPv6 than I did before watching. I haven't yet decided whether I'm happy or upset about it lol. Thanks Andy! Very concise to the point and easy to understand.
Why were you avoiding it?
@@isithardtobevegan53 I was hoping I'd retire or move on before I had to learn yet another protocol that in this case wouldn't be needed for a very long time if ever for my market segment. Especially after private IP addressing became available way back when. Anyone want to learn some IPX/SPX protocol that no longer exists? haha. Anyone remember encapsulating IPX with IP4 to interconnect locations over the Internet as opposed to private leased lines? Jack of all trades now as I literally have to know implement and support every aspect of my customers environments minus the phone system though I do all the networking and security for that as well. Eventually you just don't want to put stuff in your head you really don't need to focus on. But we can't avoid bigtech forcing the issue so learn it I shall though beyond a test lab I'll likely never implement it anywhere unless it's really needed or required. I better be retired by then lol. I think I'm turning into Homer Simpson where a new learned item goes in and something comes out lol. That or I'm just getting old and difficult haha.
I so feel you there 😀..
You are amazing! Thank you for this explanation. So many of your videos helps keep so many brushed up on what they need to know for their IT Administration work. So very helpful.
Thanks so much👍😊
This is a gem. I saved it in one of my playlists for reference.
Same
Hey man you got it I have been looking at ipv6 addresses scared and even thought I had to rewind one I think it clicked kudos to you
Wow, you rock my good sir! Thank you, really very clear! Fantastic!
i love that you wrote in, 'what the internet have done.' tickled me.
Amazing explanation Andy thanks a lot
There is still so many unanswered questions. I'm an IT professional with 15 years experience and I've never used IPv6 so the statement that you need it is false. When would I actually use this? Yes the main reason for it is because we're running out of IPv4 addresses, but since the introduction of NAT, this isn't an issue. If it wasn't for NAT, we'd have run out of addresses years ago. I run a nationwide company with multiple offices, and unless each office has more than 254 devices, a /24 subnet is enough. I personally use /22 for future proofing. So with IPv6, is not not the case this is used for the routers internet facing connection? Would I have to also use it internally, or can it still be IPv4 internally?
All you've done here is explain hex, and that you can squish the address down if it has recurring zero's. What's the standard equivalent of 192.168 you'd use internally? Watching this does not make you an expert as you claim at the end. I am in no position to apply this in the real world at all.
Thanks Mr. Malone from Philipines
Nice. I'm a little confused you were saying why hexadecimal can't use 16? Didn't make sense that you said "it's the network number" and you use 0 to 15 not 1 to 15 (that would only be Base 15 making no sense)... Here's what I thought you were trying to explain: Base 16 means sixteen symbols possible per digit. Base 10 (we call decimal) has ten symbols '0' to '9', but hexadecimal uses those plus 'A' to 'F' giving you 16 symbols instead. We do it to exactly match 4 bits in binary (Base 2). So the reason you "can't use 16" is because we start at 0 not 1 for the 16 symbols of Base 16. Same reason the decimal symbol cannot be 10 because the ten symbols are 0 to 9.
Awesome presentation, I would like to know about the multicasting and how exactly the data is sent to other devices. I am learning IPV6 outside of any school or formal education. So some questions I have overlook basic concepts I should already have. However I do grasp the protocols usage very well and I am experimenting with what it can do in regards to sending messages to multiple devices. I am certainly looking into specializing into this technology as a professional consultant.
thanks for this great video!
Great video as always, and a good refresher on how to convert decimal base numbers to other base systems: how can you guarantee me that 1,328,334,674 and 1,564,930,436 are indeed distinct numbers? 😁😁😁
You got me at “Hello There”.
Hello Sir, Could you please help me with something about Azure subscription for some reason Microsoft don't accept prepaid or virtual visa cards they need visa cards not prepaid cards, I am living in Libya where banks here give only prepaid visa cards, is there a way I can get azure subscription so I can do practice while preparing for Microsoft certification, thank you
In the same time it's perfectly OK with MS365 business subscription they accept prepaid cards but not azure
I am aware of this and you are quite right Microsoft only except fully usable credit cards not the ones you’ve mentioned. Unfortunately, it’s policy.
The strange thing they accept debit card for ms365 why is that, How could I ever do my certification if they dnt have a solution even through using Microsoft local partner?, thank you for your reply
Ouch!
You talk about it in 10 minutes!