On Aug 10, 2011, at 6:43 PM, William Herrin wrote:
I mean really, why wouldn't the life safety system in a car dynamically acquire its globally-addressable IPv6 addresses from the customer's cheap home Internet equipment? So they'll each need their /64's which means the car as a whole needs a /62. But the HAN only needed a /60 for for all of it since there were only 3 cars.
several cars on the road today have cellular radios on more than one network ( the nissan leaf for example) When you account for integration into the driver and passengers personal area networks (pans) as for example ford sync does today, and integration into home automation networks, (garage doors, lighting, media syncronization) and in the case of electric cars, the smart grid) why wouldn't a car, acquire addresses and be discoverable on the users home network? By the time this is fully realized, the car will be on quite a few networks, instead of just the two or three it's presently either supporting or attached to...