[85] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: to name or not name
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Michael Dillon)
Fri Jul 28 14:02:34 1995
Date: Fri, 28 Jul 1995 11:03:40 -0700 (PDT)
From: Michael Dillon <michael@memra.com>
To: Hans-Werner Braun <hwb@upeksa.sdsc.edu>
cc: nanog@merit.edu
In-Reply-To: <199507281706.KAA25045@upeksa.sdsc.edu>
On Fri, 28 Jul 1995, Hans-Werner Braun wrote:
> I have an idea. Lets create a .ssn domain. Better yet, lets assume
> everything plain numeric is an SSN. As you all know, Vixie's SSN is
> 123-45-6789. Consider that address to be a middle level. At the bottom you
> need something that maps it to where, e.g., he can find his email. When he
> wants to hang out in his hotel in Costa Rica tomorrow, he may have to remap
> 123456789, so things can be found wherever he really wants them. Probably a
> host on the hotel's HIPPI switch. Point is, at the identifier-to-location
> mapping, things have to be flexible enough to easily and quickly be updated.
> Kind of like cellular auto-roaming. May be he can even use his cellular
> phone to beacon around where he is *really* located, so the mapper finds
> him, and so he may not have to do much explicitly.
Yuckk! Why put all the intelligence in the central system. Look at the
Internet, dumb routers and packet switches flipping data bits all over
the place with all the intelligence in the hosts at the periphery. Paul
has a mail server at vixie.sf.ca.us that receives his mail and if he
really needed access remotely, he can just run a POP server there and
pick it up anywhere there is a net connection. Or if he cares about where
the mail lands, he can have vixie.sf.ca.us forward all his mail via UUCP
and then poll via TCP/IP or modem from wherever he happens to be located.
> May mean you have to give machines social security numbers as well, as you
> may have to address more generic resources (humans are just one
> instantiation) before too long.
IPv6 will save us all. We can address each cell in our bodies and have
enough addresses left over for the light switches. Every child will
receive their IPv6 allocation at birth.
Michael Dillon Voice: +1-604-546-8022
Memra Software Inc. Fax: +1-604-542-4130
http://www.memra.com E-mail: michael@memra.com