- Jul 12, 2004
- 37
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As IPv6 is becoming more and more accepted I think that Anandtech should be in the foremost front and also support IPv6.
If your ISP/webhotel does not support IPv6 natively you can sign up for a IPv6-on-IPv4 tunnel freely with many of the available "tunnel brokers".
here is a few:
http://www.sixxs.net
http://ipv6tb.he.net
https://tb.ipv6.btexact.com
http://www.freenet6.net
There are plenty on google. Also join #ipv6 on irc.freenode.net or on irc.ipv6.freenode.net (very good source of information and help to setup)
I also suggest that everyone else also get themselfs a IPv6 connection. =) It is easy and will allow you to have millions of IP addresses on your own!
Windows XP, 2003, *BSD and Linux support IPv6 natively.
Windows 2000 need a recent service pack and a "Advanced networking" patch which is available freely from Microsoft.
If your ISP/webhotel does not support IPv6 natively you can sign up for a IPv6-on-IPv4 tunnel freely with many of the available "tunnel brokers".
here is a few:
http://www.sixxs.net
http://ipv6tb.he.net
https://tb.ipv6.btexact.com
http://www.freenet6.net
There are plenty on google. Also join #ipv6 on irc.freenode.net or on irc.ipv6.freenode.net (very good source of information and help to setup)
I also suggest that everyone else also get themselfs a IPv6 connection. =) It is easy and will allow you to have millions of IP addresses on your own!
Windows XP, 2003, *BSD and Linux support IPv6 natively.
Windows 2000 need a recent service pack and a "Advanced networking" patch which is available freely from Microsoft.