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hnlmorglast Saturday at 9:02 AM1 replyview on HN

> and that's fairly easy to reason about for me

But we aren’t talking about someone technical glancing at their home routers firewall. We are talking about explaining a network topology to enterprise teams like change management, CISO, etc in large infrastructure environments.

That’s a whole different problem and half the time the people signing off that change either aren’t familiar with the infrastructure (which means explaining the entire context from the ground up) and often aren’t even engineers so need those changes explained in a simplified yet still retaining the technical detail.

These types of organisations mandate CIS / NIST / etc compliance even where it makes zero sense and getting action items in such reports marked as “not required” often takes a meeting in itself with deep architectural discussing with semi-technical people.

Are these types of organisations overly bureaucratic? Absolutely. But that’s typical for any enterprise organisation where processes have been placed to protect individuals and the business from undue risk.

In short, what works for home set ups or even a start up isn’t necessarily what’s going to work for enterprise.


Replies

9devlast Saturday at 9:15 AM

> But we aren’t talking about someone technical glancing at their home routers firewall.

Are we not? Because I suppose most people here are only disgruntled by a new protocol that changes how their home router works, and having to spend some learning effort.

For network admins in commercial settings, this is even less of an excuse. IPv6, the protocol, is fairly well documented and understandable if you put in the work to do so. And I am confident in saying it is absolutely able to deliver on any kind of corporate network scenario, even moreso than IPv4.

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