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Messages - W6BQZ

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I hope it is okay to offer this, at least for now on a temporary basis to see what happens.  We are working on our RR 1258 - Kenwood 480HX today and I am going to offer a Chat Room at:

http://www.group7155.com/chat

We will be on today, Sunday, at 21:30 plus or minus

As I understand it.  It will be available for the next 48 hours.

73,

Ken - W6BQZ

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Configuration, RRC 1258 / Re: ATT Uverse router settings ?
« on: 2016-08-05, 20:33:18 »
Good info.  Thanks.

I'm not sure why you want a static IP address, Time Warner wasn't static and I used my RR on TW for over 2 years in joyous bliss without it ever changing IP numbers.  And, static IPs come with an awful cost, am I right?

And it shouldn't be so hard to get ATT to be able to reveal if they are IPv4 or IPv6, but it is.  Like pulling' teeth.

Anyway, I have found another ham in my club who believes he may well have some answers.  In my case, I have the ATT combo router/modem and my own modem is plugged into it.  Up until now, I (with a ton of help for a different ham) tried using both my router and plugging directly into the ATT router.  Both attempts failed.  But my new aquaintance just told me that we should plug directly into the ATT router.  We will be doing that and more in the next week and if I come back successful, I will, we will promise to share what we did.

I have to say this at this point.  It should not be so hard to make these RRs work.  With all of our brains and technology, we somehow have failed to get our computers and our radios to talk to one another.  I shouldn't have to hire a tech to get it to function, and neither should you.  But here we are.

All for now.  I will report back soon.

Ken - W6BQZ

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Configuration, RRC 1258 / Re: ATT Uverse router settings ?
« on: 2016-07-29, 20:41:49 »
It does look like it will be some time before the firmware will be available, so IPv4 is the only way for the foreseeable future

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Configuration, RRC 1258 / Re: ATT Uverse router settings ?
« on: 2016-07-29, 20:40:35 »
What department (and what tech level) did you talk to at ATT to get IPV4?

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Configuration, RRC 1258 / Re: ATT Uverse router settings ?
« on: 2016-07-24, 20:32:38 »
Looks like we're in the same boat.  I just posted same thing.  ("AT no T -- Configuration")

If you find any info, let me know, and visa versa.

Good luck to us,

Did you try to connect to your router and their router, or are you just using their router?  We're your problems in port forwarding?

Ken - W6BQZ

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Configuration, RRC 1258 / AT no T -- Configuration
« on: 2016-07-24, 20:24:39 »
Anyone have success with setting up 1258's with ATT U-Verse?

We worked on it for hours yesterday only to come up empty handed.

We have U-Verse, they tell us they are IPv4 (is there a test for that?), the Router is Model 5268 AC.  There is a side unit with coax in and ethernet from it to router wireless router.

We have tried to get the RR to work off of ATT's modem and our modem.  (When ATT was installed they brought the line into their modem and then into our router.)

Photos are attached.

Any help out there is you-have-no-idea appreciated.  History:  We've had Time Warner here prior to our recent switch from ATT.  It worked nicely with the 1258 for two years.  But, now we are trying to use ATT and it is a challenge.

Ken - W6BQZ

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Configuration, RRC 1258 / Re: IPv6
« on: 2016-07-16, 19:41:19 »
Good to know.

Do you have (just a rough) estimate of the ETA / Timeframe?

Ken - W6BQZ

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Configuration, RRC 1258 / Re: IPv6
« on: 2016-07-15, 23:55:28 »
This sounds good, but I didn't understand it.

Are you saying that a firmware upgrade is all it will take?  And that when you have it ready we will be able to upload it?  And then it will work with IPv6?

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Configuration, RRC 1258 / Re: IPv6
« on: 2016-07-15, 15:42:01 »
Excerpt from an article I found.  From 2010 (even then they were talking about IPv6):

IPv6 is the long-anticipated upgrade to the Internet's main communications protocol, which is known as IPv4. uses 32-bit addresses and can support 4.3 billion devices connected directly to the Internet. IPv6 , on the other hand, uses 128-bit addresses and supports a virtually unlimited number of devices – 2 to the 128th power.

Less than 5% of IPv4 addresses are still available as of last week (remember this article was written 6 years ago), according to the regional Internet registries that allocate IPv4 and IPv6 address space to carriers. Experts predict that the registries will hand out the remaining IPv4 addresses by the end of 2011, leading to full-fledged IPv4 address depletion.

Once IPv4 addresses are depleted, ISPs must give their new customers IPv6 addresses or use carrier-grade network address translation (NAT) to share a single IPv4 address among multiple customers. Carrier-grade NAT is expected to result in slower performing, more costly and more complicated network services than native IPv6 services.


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Configuration, RRC 1258 / Re: IPv6
« on: 2016-07-15, 15:24:33 »

Good to hear that  you are looking at updating 1258 to work with IPv6.  When you do will you show that on the purchase page?

Or, can I be on a waiting list for the IPv6 units?

To be a little more specific about our situation:

The cable companies, at least here, can deliver IPv4 when they have their cable coming directly to your house. That is the case with Time Warner.  But even they are rumbling about converting to IPv6, and that day is coming they say.  But they don't say when.  They just say it is.

The AT&T/Direct TV folks have just completed a campaign to deliver U-Verse and went hard sell door-to-door to lure the neighbors at a price few could turn down.  Even me.  And, their streaming video works amazingly well.  Laptops, Mac or PC, don't complain either.  So, most consumers won't care about 6 or 4 or ever know what that is, and that is more reason for the companies to go in that direction, with the capability of delivering unlimited IP address, even if they aren't the real deal.  Here is how they do it:

The way AT&T wires their system is to put their lines into a local box, down the street and around the corner 3 blocks away, and then that unit is the modem (but they won't admit it).  The further away from that street modem you are, the lower your speeds are.  So, from that modem it comes to the house "Fiber" and when it is in the house, it is in the form of a 75 ohm coax.  So you really don't know the difference.  However, that coax is connected inside the house (next to my computer) to a "Connected Home Adapter" which is about the size of a candy bar (fits in the palm of your hand, 4" x 2" x 1 ---   Model number:  Direct TV - DCAU1RO-01).  We are doing our diligence to determine if it is indeed IPv6 but it is looking that way.  (Many ham buddies say or think it is DSL, but my calls to AT&T have told me it is definitely not DSL).

The first clue that it is possibly 6 was the 1258 wouldn't hook up.

WhatsMyIp shows two addresses, one that looks like a regular IP address, and the other that looks like a MAC address.

I love the two years I have had my 1258 and rave about it to just about any ham I meet.  I am hoping that you can find a solution on your end while here on our end we might possibly have to go back to providers who are charging twice as much because they think they can.  I might have to have both AT&T and TW at an additional expense just to get the job done.

Okay, let me know how I can find out if and when IPv6 1258's are available because soon the Internet is going to be invaded by 6's and 4's might be harder to find.

Ken - W6BQZ - Carlsbad






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Configuration, RRC 1258 / Re: IPv6
« on: 2016-07-15, 06:20:00 »
That's disheartening.

Are you making the new units so that they are compatible?  If so, I would like to buy one.

Ken - W6BQZ

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Configuration, RRC 1258 / IPv6
« on: 2016-07-15, 05:01:09 »
Are the 1258 models compatible with IPv6?

All was well.  I was with Time Warner Cable.  IPv4.

Now I switched to AT&T and we suspect we have IPv6.  WhatsMyIP shows two addresses, one is IPv4, the other IPv6.

Are the 1258 models compatible with IPv6?

That is the big question.  My unit has worked wonderfully.  I have had it for two years.

So is my unit okay with IPv6?

Or, are the new 1258's designed to work with IPv6?

Ken - W6BQZ


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