3 private links
Guest Post: How to easily enable IPv6 support for apps without it.
NetBird combines a configuration-free peer-to-peer private network and a centralized access control system in a single cloud platform.
IPng Networks GmbH provides networking consultancy, hosting, colocation, internet connectivity options primarily tailored for the Zurich metropolitan area.
Pim Van Pelt
The Internet has been adopted worldwide, and is part of daily life.
This exhibit expresses the flow of binary information.
The "Hands-On Model of the Internet" exhibit uses white and black balls to visualize how information is delivered over the Internet. A message can be sent from one terminal to another using information packets consisting of 16 white and black balls. Watch how your message moves through the network spinning around in towers that are mechanical equivalents of electronic routers before it reaches its destination terminal.
By sending messages, sounds, or even movements, and actually seeing them delivered to a person on the other side of the network, you can directly experience that the Internet is within understanding, and see it as a communication tool that connects the world.
Sipcalc is an advanced ip calculator supporting both IPv4 and IPv6. - GitHub - sii/sipcalc: Sipcalc is an advanced ip calculator supporting both IPv4 and IPv6.
L’histoire du Réseau National de télécommunications pour la Technologie, l’Enseignement et la Recherche, constitué en Groupement d’Intérêt Public en janvier 1993, débute dans les années 1980, quand des acteurs scientifiques, de manière simultanée mais encore dispersée, commencent à s’organiser en réseaux. C’est poser d’emblée une originalité de Renater : des besoins et réalisations précèdent la mise en place de l’infrastructure nationale. Si, les origines largement universitaires et scientifiques d’Internet aux États-Unis ne sont plus à démontrer, celles d’Internet en France sont plus largement méconnues et demandent à être réévaluées.
DNS and IP Management. Contribute to 1and1/dim development by creating an account on GitHub.
Out of interest, why didn't you just bridge the two interfaces? Did you want everything on a separate subnet? (maybe I missed that but but you mentioned before how everything used to be directly plugged in any way.
eqvinox 1 day ago [–]
You can't bridge regular 802.11 wireless into ethernet at the client side. The on-air addressing requires the client MAC address to be the same as the ethernet packet's sender.
802.11 has the concept of "transmitter address" and "receiver address" in addition to source and destination. Those are MAC addresses too, but they're relevant for the on-air radio management. Things like RTS, CTS, ACKs, and fancier things like beamforming and sounding. The problem is that the design only includes 3 address fields in on-air frames; the AP can specify separate SA and TA (i.e. send a packet for somebody else, SA=real source, TA=AP MAC, RA=DA=client.) There is no mechanism for the client to do the same thing; that would require 4 address fields.
Coincidentally, 4 address fields is exactly what you get with "WDS" / "Wireless Extender" / ... modes. However, these need to be supported, enabled and configured on both the AP and client. The author of the post seems to have no access to the AP to do so (and the AP possibly doesn't support it anyway.)