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authorMichał M. Sapka <michal@sapka.me>2023-04-27 22:45:28 +0200
committerMichał M. Sapka <michal@sapka.me>2023-04-27 22:45:28 +0200
commit90e8acffcbcc01679f84517d0bbc5a67e63b117b (patch)
tree6f095bdf34c9539b16b3992d21482279c11837f0 /content
parent781439b657f021a1c4ef52af280af729d422a4fa (diff)
fix: link
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-rw-r--r--content/2023/size-of-ipv6.md3
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/content/2023/size-of-ipv6.md b/content/2023/size-of-ipv6.md
index 2703da2..95a506f 100644
--- a/content/2023/size-of-ipv6.md
+++ b/content/2023/size-of-ipv6.md
@@ -9,8 +9,9 @@ tags:
- networking
- IPv6
- Absolute-FreeBSD
+- Michael-W-Lucas
---
-[Absolute FreeBSD by Michael W. Lucas](https://nostarch.com/absfreebsd3):
+[Absolute FreeBSD by Michael W. Lucas](https://mwl.io/nonfiction/os#af3e):
> IPv6 uses 128-bit [...] A 128-bit address space is unimaginably huge, but let’s try to imagine it. Count every human being that’s ever lived. Now count the number of cells in each of them—not just in their body but also all the bacterial cells in their bodies. IPv6 is roomy enough to assign each of those cells an address space larger than the entirety of IPv4.