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128 bits is much less user readable than a six-byte dotted format.

Retaining a dotted format could have led to less drastic changes to both low level and application software.

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Readability is not a valid argument here. – Jeremy Visser May 6 '11 at 5:37
Or rather, use DNS that's what it is for, stop hard coding IP addresses. – Steve-o May 6 '11 at 14:49

closed as off topic by fvu, schnaader, Robert Harvey May 6 '11 at 22:10

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3 Answers

IPv4 to IPv6 is a backwards-incompatible change no matter how you slice it, so there's no reason to do a half-assed job of it. Having a REALLY wide address has all sorts of interesting benefits anyway, like simplifying routing and address autoconfiguration.

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Future-proofing. The v6 transition is a big enough headache that no one wants to ever have to switch to IPv7. The dotted format is mainly for the benefit of humans anyway, not the machines.

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We wouldn't have had enough time to fight off the nanobots that way.

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You got it backwards... The nanobots would have stopped much sooner. :-) – R.. May 10 '11 at 12:53
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@R. Dah! You are of course quite right. Thanks for the response, I was starting to think that no one on SO had a sense of humor! – Jon of All Trades May 10 '11 at 15:53

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