On Sun, Sep 25, 2016, at 23:27, Mark Andrews wrote:
But it shows that if you turn on IPv6 on the servers you will get IPv6 traffic. We are no longer is a world where turning on IPv6 got you a handful of connections. There are billions of devices that can talk IPv6 to you today the moment you allow them to.
I know, but for the "server guys" turning on IPv6 it's pretty low on priority list.
Can all your customers talk IPv6 to you? No. It the proportion of customers that can talk IPv6 to you increasing? Yes.
My customers are eyeballs. Residential ones have dual-stack by default, business - some have, some don't and some explicitly refuse (or ask for v6 to be disabled).
Is somewhere between 11-14% worldwide enough for you to invest the time to turn on IPv6 enough? It should be.
Since they (the 11-14% worldwide) do have IPv4 anyway, some consider it's not worth; at least not yet. The issue with IPv6 deployment it's not as simple as some people suggest. It's not a technical problem either, but it's a big one.