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Never thought being in the Netherlands would be such a pain in the ass


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Posted (edited)

Client get new router... Time Warner has to bridge their router to ours bypassing their NAT and firewall. When the client goes to www.yahoo.com it changes and goes to nl.yahoo.com. Come to find out Time Warner due to them running out of IP addresses purchased a block of address from the Netherlands and we have one. 192.198.x.x.

 

Their is only 4.4 billion address in IP v4. IP v6 will have enough addresses in that each star in the galaxy can have a IP 4v worth of addresses... 4.4 billion and have plenty left over.

 

Problem is not sure I will be able to memorize anyone's IP address. :)

 

Here is a IP v6

FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329 

compared to 

192.168.1.1

 

Not looking forward to this but get me out of NL. lol

Edited by hxtr


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Posted

crazy shit happens fo sure



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Posted (edited)

Client get new router... Time Warner has to bridge their router to ours bypassing their NAT and firewall. When the client goes to www.yahoo.com it changes and goes to nl.yahoo.com. Come to find out Time Warner due to them running out of IP addresses purchased a block of address from the Netherlands and we have one. 192.198.x.x.

 

Their is only 4.4 billion address in IP v4. IP v6 will have enough addresses in that each star in the galaxy can have a IP 4v worth of addresses... 4.4 billion and have plenty left over.

 

Problem is not sure I will be able to memorize anyone's IP address. :)

 

Here is a IP v6

FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329 

compared to 

192.168.1.1

 

Not looking forward to this but get me out of NL. lol

 

Have you been to the red light district? 

 

524cf0f670b5f_maxresdefault.jpg

Edited by Joe Canadian


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Posted

 

Client get new router... Time Warner has to bridge their router to ours bypassing their NAT and firewall. When the client goes to www.yahoo.com it changes and goes to nl.yahoo.com. Come to find out Time Warner due to them running out of IP addresses purchased a block of address from the Netherlands and we have one. 192.198.x.x.

 

Their is only 4.4 billion address in IP v4. IP v6 will have enough addresses in that each star in the galaxy can have a IP 4v worth of addresses... 4.4 billion and have plenty left over.

 

Problem is not sure I will be able to memorize anyone's IP address. :)

 

Here is a IP v6

FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329 

compared to 

192.168.1.1

 

Not looking forward to this but get me out of NL. lol

 

Have you been to the red light district? 

 

524cf0f670b5f_maxresdefault.jpg

 

BTW, that's Google, available for $25  lol



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Posted

 

Client get new router... Time Warner has to bridge their router to ours bypassing their NAT and firewall. When the client goes to www.yahoo.com it changes and goes to nl.yahoo.com. Come to find out Time Warner due to them running out of IP addresses purchased a block of address from the Netherlands and we have one. 192.198.x.x.

 

Their is only 4.4 billion address in IP v4. IP v6 will have enough addresses in that each star in the galaxy can have a IP 4v worth of addresses... 4.4 billion and have plenty left over.

 

Problem is not sure I will be able to memorize anyone's IP address. :)

 

Here is a IP v6

FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329 

compared to 

192.168.1.1

 

Not looking forward to this but get me out of NL. lol

 

Have you been to the red light district? 

 

524cf0f670b5f_maxresdefault.jpg

Olive and Frenchi may like this. When living in Germany my mom and I took a trip to Paris. Food sucks BTW but all the cars have cool yellow lights but a bit of a fog. hahaha

We go to some show close to the Red Light District. Topless but in good taste. After the show we are walking down the strip and it was sex shop.. sex shop.. resturant.. sex shop. Im like 13 years old. Im glancing the porn pics of each places as we are walking by lagging as much as I could from my mom. Sometimes lag is good. hahahhaa

 

Well this guy standing outside was like.. come see, come on in.. some crap like that and I slow way down and he grabs my shirt a bit pulling me inside. I was all game but my mom looks back and flips. hahahahhaha

 

But WOW the bread was so good... mom and I ate a loaf on our start back home. Got to see Mona... she is hot but has a bit of a problem constantly staring at you. :)



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Posted

Due to the government want to increase the tourist traffic they change the name to Green District with the motto: Anything goes :wub:



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Posted

 

Client get new router... Time Warner has to bridge their router to ours bypassing their NAT and firewall. When the client goes to www.yahoo.com it changes and goes to nl.yahoo.com. Come to find out Time Warner due to them running out of IP addresses purchased a block of address from the Netherlands and we have one. 192.198.x.x.

 

Their is only 4.4 billion address in IP v4. IP v6 will have enough addresses in that each star in the galaxy can have a IP 4v worth of addresses... 4.4 billion and have plenty left over.

 

Problem is not sure I will be able to memorize anyone's IP address. :)

 

Here is a IP v6

FE80:0000:0000:0000:0202:B3FF:FE1E:8329 

compared to 

192.168.1.1

 

Not looking forward to this but get me out of NL. lol

 

Have you been to the red light district? 

 

524cf0f670b5f_maxresdefault.jpg

Next time you go take me along I will quietly watch! :)



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Posted

Get out of my country u idiot ! 



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Posted

Get out of my country u idiot ! 

Im trying but these damn routers keep redirecting my packets. I need a NL filter. 



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Posted

The redirect to nl.yahoo.com is business as usual. Should be the same for google.com (redirect to google.nl) as this is a location based redirect. Sometimes it sucks...

 

One way to avoid this is to use a proxy in the US.



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Posted

The redirect to nl.yahoo.com is business as usual. Should be the same for google.com (redirect to google.nl) as this is a location based redirect. Sometimes it sucks...

 

One way to avoid this is to use a proxy in the US.

Well since my origin of the IP range is set to be in .nl and purchased from there some places dont or do check for that. 

 

google I think is smarter. Judge the IP from the origin by the route in the packet for trace or other. Yahoo I think has been lazy and not come up to date to this.. maybe or for some other reason. 

 

Now what I see is the problem that we will soon fucking run out of addresses. HOW THE FUCK WILL I REMEMBER MY or YOUR IP ADDRESS???



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Posted

Written in german, translated with Google (too lazy and at i am @ work)

There are two methods that are otherwise very long IPv6 addresses shorten so that they are still clear: You may combine one or more leading zeros and
not tender .
Each IPv6 address consists of eight hexadecimal integer numbers , separated by colons. Located within two colons , for example , the number " : 0090 ," is the shorthand " : 90 ," . If there are zeros between two colons " : 0000: " , you can omit this also the same . Thus, for example from " 2001:0000:0000:0090:00 AD : 0000:1234 : abcd " the " 2001 :: 90 : AD : 0000:1234 : abcd " . In order to preserve the uniqueness , the last group is zero abbreviate . Otherwise would not be clear what abbreviation ( ie "::" ) is to be filled with as many zeros.


The second method is to define the always constant in the same network prefix once and no longer kept in the following. This saves about half of typing . On the above example, the prefix could be 2001:0000:0000:0090 :: / 60 " for example ." If you get from your ISP a / 60 subnet , will never change this prefix in your own network , you can define it once and then leave so in applications . The administrator of an IPv6 name server would define this once and work in the following only with the remaining four hexadecimal integers. In internal network plans , documentation or correspondence you can save this prefix.



Third Method:
DNS



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Posted

Written in german, translated with Google (too lazy and at i am @ work)

There are two methods that are otherwise very long IPv6 addresses shorten so that they are still clear: You may combine one or more leading zeros and

not tender . Each IPv6 address consists of eight hexadecimal integer numbers , separated by colons. Located within two colons , for example , the number " : 0090 ," is the shorthand " : 90 ," . If there are zeros between two colons " : 0000: " , you can omit this also the same . Thus, for example from " 2001:0000:0000:0090:00 AD : 0000:1234 : abcd " the " 2001 :: 90 : AD : 0000:1234 : abcd " . In order to preserve the uniqueness , the last group is zero abbreviate . Otherwise would not be clear what abbreviation ( ie "::" ) is to be filled with as many zeros.The second method is to define the always constant in the same network prefix once and no longer kept in the following. This saves about half of typing . On the above example, the prefix could be 2001:0000:0000:0090 :: / 60 " for example ." If you get from your ISP a / 60 subnet , will never change this prefix in your own network , you can define it once and then leave so in applications . The administrator of an IPv6 name server would define this once and work in the following only with the remaining four hexadecimal integers. In internal network plans , documentation or correspondence you can save this prefix.

Third Method:

DNS

And they call you. An idiot... bAH!,



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Posted (edited)

@@LordOfChaos

 

What should I say?

I call myself an idiot. So what?

Edited by TecHnOBoY


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Posted

Written in german, translated with Google (too lazy and at i am @ work)

 

There are two methods that are otherwise very long IPv6 addresses shorten so that they are still clear: You may combine one or more leading zeros and

not tender . Each IPv6 address consists of eight hexadecimal integer numbers , separated by colons. Located within two colons , for example , the number " : 0090 ," is the shorthand " : 90 ," . If there are zeros between two colons " : 0000: " , you can omit this also the same . Thus, for example from " 2001:0000:0000:0090:00 AD : 0000:1234 : abcd " the " 2001 :: 90 : AD : 0000:1234 : abcd " . In order to preserve the uniqueness , the last group is zero abbreviate . Otherwise would not be clear what abbreviation ( ie "::" ) is to be filled with as many zeros.

 

 

The second method is to define the always constant in the same network prefix once and no longer kept in the following. This saves about half of typing . On the above example, the prefix could be 2001:0000:0000:0090 :: / 60 " for example ." If you get from your ISP a / 60 subnet , will never change this prefix in your own network , you can define it once and then leave so in applications . The administrator of an IPv6 name server would define this once and work in the following only with the remaining four hexadecimal integers. In internal network plans , documentation or correspondence you can save this prefix.

 

 

Third Method:

DNS

Like I said I will never remember an IP address. hahahaha

 

What will be the Intranet address range like 10.x and 192.160.x


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