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To: Brad Knowles <brad.knowles@skynet.be>, Ed Sawicki <ed@alcpress.com>, Randy Bush <randy@psg.com>
Cc: dnsop@cafax.se, namedroppers@ops.ietf.org, ngtrans@sunroof.eng.sun.com, ipng@sunroof.eng.sun.com
From: Edward Lewis <edlewis@arin.net>
Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 20:04:11 -0400
In-Reply-To: <a05111b0eb95a3d13cbc1@[10.9.8.228]>
Sender: owner-dnsop@cafax.se
Subject: Re: (ngtrans) Re: RFC 1886 Interop Tests & Results

At 11:17 PM +0200 7/16/02, Brad Knowles wrote:
>	IMO, tests like this without full disclosure are meaningless.

Meaningless to whom?

1) For the specification process, it is not important who is able to 
produce compliant and interoperable implementations but that it is 
possible.  This is a necessary - but not sufficient - part of the 
process.

2) For the implementors, getting clarification that leads to more 
implementations is good for all - choice spurs competition spurs 
growth of a market (at least in the development phase, before mergers 
and acquisitions kick in).

3) For buyers, yes, anonymized results are not beneficial.  But then 
the IETF is not about being a venue for selling (a la Interop, trade 
magazines, consumer shows) but a venue for collaboration.  (I.e., 
this audience is beyond the scope of the IETF's services.)
-- 
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Edward Lewis                                          +1-703-227-9854
ARIN Research Engineer


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