← Back to context Comment by johnisgood 1 month ago What holds them back though? Even my shitty self-hosted website on a not-so-known VPS supports IPv6. 4 comments johnisgood Reply apearson 1 month ago I'm assuming priorities and convincing the old guard it's something to do zorpner 1 month ago It provides no benefit, so even the smallest amount of added complexity or additional engineering effort required isn't worthwhile. johnisgood 1 month ago I did not have to put any additional engineering effort into it though. tredre3 1 month ago Because in your own words what you built is "a shitty self-hosted website", not a complex web of distributed services that need to talk to each-other.
zorpner 1 month ago It provides no benefit, so even the smallest amount of added complexity or additional engineering effort required isn't worthwhile. johnisgood 1 month ago I did not have to put any additional engineering effort into it though. tredre3 1 month ago Because in your own words what you built is "a shitty self-hosted website", not a complex web of distributed services that need to talk to each-other.
johnisgood 1 month ago I did not have to put any additional engineering effort into it though. tredre3 1 month ago Because in your own words what you built is "a shitty self-hosted website", not a complex web of distributed services that need to talk to each-other.
tredre3 1 month ago Because in your own words what you built is "a shitty self-hosted website", not a complex web of distributed services that need to talk to each-other.
I'm assuming priorities and convincing the old guard it's something to do
It provides no benefit, so even the smallest amount of added complexity or additional engineering effort required isn't worthwhile.
I did not have to put any additional engineering effort into it though.
Because in your own words what you built is "a shitty self-hosted website", not a complex web of distributed services that need to talk to each-other.