On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 11:55:35AM -0700, David Conrad wrote:
On Mar 28, 2012, at 11:47 AM, Carlos Martinez-Cagnazzo wrote:
I'm not a fan of conspiracy theories, but, c'mon. For a provisioning system, an AAAA record is just a fragging string, just like any other DNS record. How difficult to support can it be ?
Of course it is more than a string. It requires touching code, (hopefully) testing that code, deploying it, training customer support staff to answer questions, updating documentation, etc. Presumably Netsol did the cost/benefit analysis and decided the potential increase in revenue generated by the vast hordes of people demanding IPv6 (or the potential lost in revenue as the vast hordes transfer away) didn't justify the expense. Simple business decision.
Regards, -drc
once, years ago, Netsol -did- have a path for injecting AAAA records. It was prototype code with the engineering team. I had records registered with them. Have since sold the domains and they moved to other registries. But they did support it for a while. /bill