On Sat, Jul 8, 2017, at 03:06, Owen DeLong wrote:
consider a /48 per guest room as well as a /48 per hotel for the hotel itself.
I think the classfull madness of "/48 everywhere" should stop at some point; the "every subnet is a /64" is enough already. A /48 is 65536 *subnets*, with each subnet having space for what can be considered "unlimited" number of devices. A /56 already is 256 *subnets*. Now please show be a hotel room that has close to 65536 items in it (also tell me how much does a night in such a room cost). Then how many rooms may host close to 256 devices that can transmit and receive data ? And then again, at the end of the day a hotel is *NOT* and ISP, a hotel is a hotel. Internet access is just an extra service that became mandatory lately in order to remain "competitive".