![]() But let Windows prefer IPv6 for the reasons I’m going to discuss now. You can use IPv4 for the ease of readability. But that still doesn’t mean that you want to disable IPv6. Your internal DHCP can still use IPv4 for compatibility reasons but you’ll end up using IPv6 to access the Internet. I’m not going to bother to rehash that here other than to say that this doesn’t matter for your internal network. We all know that the world is running out of IPv4 addresses. Now that we’ve gotten that out of the way, let’s take a look at how Windows uses IPv6 even when your DHCP server is providing it an IPv4 address and your Internet router doesn’t support it. ![]() Max Value: 0xFF (IPv6 disabled) IPv6 Functionality ![]()
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