DV Hardware bringing you the hottest news about processors, graphics cards, Intel, AMD, NVIDIA, ATi, hardware and technology!

   Home | News submit | News Archives | Reviews | Articles | Howto's | Advertise
 
DarkVision Hardware - Daily tech news
  Login/sign up  
Main Menu

Home
User account
Info
News archives
Links
Articles
Howto
Reviews
Member list
 

Who's Online
There are currently 412 people and 1 DV-member(s) online.

 

Latest Reviews
  • Laptop Lifts
  • Logitech Illuminated Keyboard
  • ZOWIE P-RF mousepad
  • Cooler Master Storm Sniper case
  • Razer Lachesis mouse
  • Sharkoon PC Jump Start
  • Lowepro Cirrus TLZ 25 camera bag
  • Patriot Xporter Magnum 64GB
  •  

    RSS
    RSS
    RSS by email. Enter your email address:

     

    Threshold
      
    The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.
    Re: http://www.IPv9.info (Score: 0)
    by Anonymous on Thursday, July 15 2004 @ 00:48:01 CEST
    Your IPv8 packets appear to contain the Version Number 0100.0, which is 4.0 or 8 (01000) depending on whether you consider the binary point. IPv9 packets contain the Version Number 0100.1, which is 4.5 or 9 (01001).

    The extra Version Number Bit (the 49th Bit) is located directly after the 16 Identification Field bits. The first 49 bits in the packet form a mini-header, with 4 version bits at the start and 1 version bit at the end. IPv8 ends the mini-header with a 0 and IPv9 ends it with a 1. IPv4 does not have the 49th bit, called the Hawaii Bit.

    Modern InterNAT devices properly set the IPv9 Version Number and take advantage of the 11 Bi-Directional Extended Address Bits in the deprecated TOS Field and the re-engineered Identification Field. The TOS Field is split into two 4-bit fields and the Identification Field is re-worked into two 7-bit fields with a 2-bit field for classic identification functionality. The 4-bits and 7-bits combine to provide 11 extended address bits for both the source and destination, end-to-end, agents.

    Layer 8 and Layer 9 discussions sometimes refer to IPv8 as AM and IPv9 as FM. You appear to only have access to the AM net. There is another entire net experience, people have been enjoying for years. With a modern InterNAT system, you can access both the AM and FM InterNAT services. Voice, Video and Vibration are show-cased on the InterNAT, along with 3D3V real-time cyberspace experiences.


    [ Reply to This | Parent ]

     

    DV Hardware - Privacy statement
    All logos and trademarks are property of their respective owner.
    The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2002-2009 DM Media Group bvba