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If we have an IP-based system of identifying nodes on the Internet why is there a need for DNS?


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Because www.google.com is just a TAD easier to remember then 74.125.67.100? – ChssPly76 Aug 13 at 20:20
I absolutely love that three of us immediately pinged Google in response to this question. – Eric Aug 13 at 20:21
Sounds more like material for 69.59.196.212 erm... I mean serverfault.com. There, they can explain about how DNS names are easier to memorize, complain about the complexity of IPv6 and talk about how load balancing allows mapping one host name to X servers, how host headers work etc. etc. :-) – Michael Stum Aug 13 at 20:21
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note to above commenters: serverfault is for professionals, this sounds more appropriate to superuser. – Greg Hewgill Aug 13 at 20:23

migrated to superuser.com by Michael Stum, Greg Hewgill, ChssPly76, Rich Seller, Eric Aug 13 at 20:26

1 Answer

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You only need DNS to translate a domain name (e.g. www.google.com) into an IP (74.125.45.100). If everything is IP based, then you don't need DNS.

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