On Thu, 2005-07-07 at 18:02 +0200, Andre Oppermann wrote:
Jeroen Massar wrote:
On Thu, 2005-07-07 at 10:39 -0400, Scott McGrath wrote:
4 - Retrain entire staff to support IPv6
You have to train people to drive a car, to program a new VCR etc. What is so odd about this?
I had training to drive a car once in my life when I got my drivers license. I don't have to get a fresh training for every new car I end up driving throughout my life.
You will have to get an additional license for driving a truck or even when you are getting a caravan behind that car of yours though. Motorbikes also have different licenses and you get separate trainings for those. They all have wheels, look the same, operate somewhat the same, but are just a little bit different and need a bit different education. You also either read something, educated yourself or even got a training to operate IPv4 networks, now you will just need a refresh for IPv6. You can opt to not take it, but then don't complain you don't understand it. For that matter if you don't understand IPv6 you most likely don't IPv4 (fully) either.
If I need training to program my new VCR then the operating mode of that VCR is broken and I'm going to return it asap.
Then a lot of VCR's will be returned because if there is one thing many people don't seem to understand, even after reading the manual then it is a VCR.
It's that simple. Why are people buying iPod's like crazy? Because these thingies don't require training. People intuitively can use them because the GUI is designed well.
So you didn't read the manual of or train yourself to use your compiler| bgp|isis|rip|operatingsystem|.... and a lot of other things ? IP networks are not meant for the general public, they only care that the apps that use it work, they don't type on routers. Protocols don't have GUI's or do you have a point and click BGP? :) Greets, Jeroen