Vint Cerf is considered a father of the internet, but that doesn't mean there aren't things he would do differently if given a fresh chance to create it all over again.
"If I could have justified it, putting in a 128-bit address space would have been nice so we wouldn't have to go through this painful, 20-year process of going from IPv4 to IPv6," Cerf told an audience of journalists Thursday during a press conference at the Heidelberg Laureate Forum in Germany.
IPv4, the first publicly used version of the Internet Protocol, included an addressing system that used 32-bit numerical identifiers. It soon became apparent that it would lead to an exhaustion of addresses, however, spurring the creation of IPv6 as a replacement. Roughly a year ago, North America officially ran out of new addresses based on IPv4.
For security, public key cryptography is another thing Cerf would like to have added, had it been feasible.
Trouble is, neither idea is likely to have made it into the final result at the time. "I doubt I could have gotten away with either one," said Cerf, who won a Turing Award in 2004 and is now vice president and chief internet evangelist at Google. "So today we have to retrofit."
(Score: 1) by ankh on Sunday September 25 2016, @02:53PM
They promised us an effective search tool -- and could have built one (they're smart, right?)
A tool that would let us look for, generally and then with increasingly specific focus, what we want and think we need, and find just that.
Without a flood of approximations and wrong guesses and sheer larding on of crap.
Google should have figured out how to make their money by enabling and _improving_ search -- getting accurate and honest information from sellers and providers and creators and making that searchable, real time, with a history.
Instead they created a search tool that's used to find people and shove crap at us every time we look around.
"Bad bug. Please fix."