Looks like some devices have it enabled, and some do not. Does anyone have hotspot enabled? I am curious as to if IPv6 is being done via the hotspot, and how they are handling the prefix delegation. thanks, -Randy ----- Original Message -----
From a few minutes ago... On May 23, 2012 2:58 PM, "Frank Bulk - iName.com" < frnkblk@iname.com
wrote:
Here's a screenshot from 15 months ago: http://www.fix6.net/archives/2011/02/21/ipv6-live-on-verizons-lte-network/
Frank
-----Original Message----- From: Randy Carpenter [mailto: rcarpen@network1.net ] Sent: Tuesday, May 22, 2012 9:07 PM To: PC Cc: nanog@nanog.org Subject: Re: Current IPv6 state of US Mobile Phone Carriers
Not only does Verizon *not* have IPv6 on their LTE network, they also do *not* have IPv4, except for double-NATed rfc1918 crap that changes your IP address every couple minutes. The only way to get a stable connection is to pay them $500 to get a static public IP address.
thanks, -Randy
----- Original Message -----
IPV6 is present, to my knowledge, on all devices on the Verizon IPV6 LTE network. I noticed its using it to communicate to Google for many of it's services when I ran a netstat. I believe they mandated support for it from any certified device.
Unfortunately, it's still firewalled.
On Tue, May 22, 2012 at 5:40 PM, Paul Graydon < paul@paulgraydon.co.uk > 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