On Mon, May 9, 2011 at 11:01, Joel Jaeggli <joelja@bogus.com> wrote:
On 5/9/11 5:06 AM, TJ wrote:
Unfortunately, I suspect many organizations will be following that approach.
I hope that some will instead see this as a great opportunity for the last step in making their public services IPv6 reachable *... and that they also start/continue/complete taking IPv6 within their internal networks as well.*
my ipv6 peering with yahoo came up like 8 months ago...
Sure, but peering is not the same as publicly/universally reachable services. I hope that World IPv6 Day raises enough awareness, and yields enough success stories, that we make some noticeable progress in the near future.
I don't think there's anything particularly unfortunate about what major content providers are doing with ipv6, give them customers and they wil support them.
It is unfortunate (to me), because content providers being accessible is an important step in breaking this chicken-egg scenario. We need the service providers and content providers to make this "IPv6 thing" usable/relevant - and (just IMHO) the sooner the better. /TJ