Subj : f1d0 To : Oliver Thunes From : Michiel van der Vlist Date : Tue Oct 13 2020 12:41:04 Hello Oliver, On Tuesday October 13 2020 10:42, you wrote to Tommi Koivula: Ol>>> f1d::: in hex Ol>>> *::f1d0:0:0:0/76 TK>> Isn't that 'f1d' part useless. Zone 2 is fido anyways. Ol> I guess :1: and :2: is used more often by non-fido systems than fid0. Not in the first 16 bits of the host part of the address. Ol> But isn't the whole idea useless anyway? Most nodes have multiple FTN Ol> addresses. You cannot map the FTN address to an IP address, Most nodes do not have more than one Fidonet address. Some have more than one, but most have just one. An IP interface can (and normally does have) more than one IPv6 address. And while one can not match the Fidonet address to the IP address, one can match the address to the node number. If I see 07 Oct 18:00:10 [1404] incoming from 2a02:e840:1000:90:f1d0:2:5053:58, I know where it comes from even if the session fails to connect. is that useful? Maybe. But why does it have to be useful at all? Is Fidonet "useful"? It is a hobby. Hobbies can not be judged bu usefulness. So far 30 sysops have configured their systems to use an f1d0 address for their fidonet node. Good enough for me. Cheers, Michiel --- GoldED+/W32-MSVC 1.1.5-b20170303 * Origin: he.net certified sage (2:280/5555) .