On Tue, Mar 5, 2013 at 6:46 PM, Mukom Akong T. <mukom.tamon@gmail.com> wrote:
On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 12:34 AM, Mike. <the.lists@mgm51.com> wrote:
I would lean towards
f) Cost/benefit of deploying IPv6.
I certainly agree, which is why I propose understanding you organisation's business model and how specifically v4 exhaustion will threaten that. IPv6 is the cast as a solution to that, plus future unknown benefits that may result from e-2-e and NAT elimination.
I have no clue how to sell 'benefit' of IPv6 in isolation as right now even for engineers, there's not much of a benefit except more address space.
That is really the meat of it, more addresses is the killer IPv6 app. If you have plenty of ipv4, your situation is not very urgent, but one day it will be urgent.... There are folks who don't have much IPv4, and sometimes people on your network may want to communicate with them.. Like the folks in Europe or Asia. Remember, APNIC and RIPE are both out of IPv4 right now. So all meaningful growth (mobile, cloud, internet of things...) must happen on IPv6 ... or relatively expensive IPv4 addresses from the black market and / or NATs CB
--
Mukom Akong T.
http://about.me/perfexcellence | twitter: @perfexcellent ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ “When you work, you are the FLUTE through whose lungs the whispering of the hours turns to MUSIC" - Kahlil Gibran -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------