On 05/22/2012 01:40 PM, Paul Graydon wrote:
On 05/22/2012 01:21 PM, Cameron Byrne wrote:
On May 22, 2012 4:00 PM, "Paul Porter"<paul.porter@gree.co.jp> wrote:
Hi NANOG,
I'm looking for some information on the four largest US mobile phone carriers and the current state of their IPv6 infrastructure. Specifically, we are trying to figure out:
1. How much of the carrier core and edge for AT&T, Verizon. T-Mobile, and Sprint are on IPv6 now? Hi,
T-Mobile USA has native ipv6 to all subscribers in all of it's coverage area. But, less than 1% of subscribers use IPv6 because they do not have an IPv6 capable phone. The Nexus S and Galaxy Nexus work well.
This device challenge will improve in time. Samsung is doing a good job of bringing IPv6 to Android devices. More info here That's interesting. I have a Galaxy Nexus on T-Mobile USA and it doesn't get an IPv6 address, only IPv4. Works fine with IPv6 over my wireless network at home. Doesn't seem to be anything obvious in the settings to enable or disable that.
Paul
Cameron contacted me off list and pointed out the steps. Works a treat, NAT64 is handling the IPv4 traffic without any obvious problems, along with IPv6. Smooth and simple. Shame it has to be switched on through some manual steps, but I guess that's understandable for now given it's technically in Beta stage. Paul