In message <CAPkb-7AhUiJhRwK-iOThS2AmXof9zBboEV5m2GWQ7HJv0Onaig@mail.gmail.com> , Baldur Norddahl writes:
On 30 September 2015 at 21:41, McElearney, Kevin < Kevin_McElearney@cable.comcast.com> wrote:
This only helps 1/3 of the challenge. Even with most Comcast customers able to obtain IPv6 today and over 70% provisioned with IPv6, less than 20% of the traffic is IPv6. There is still a need to address home device support and content provider adoption.
We will never get there 100%. There are many sites out there running 100% on autopilot. They will stay IPv4 forever until the server crashes and never comes back online.
The same will be true for many homes. People who don't want to change anything. They will keep Windows XP and whatever antique device they use to connect to the internet until the thing catches fire from the accumulated dust. And then they will go on ebay to buy a replacement exactly the same.
Windows XP does IPv6 fine so long as there is a IPv4 recursive server available. It's just a simple command to install IPv6. netsh interface ipv6 install Installing a DNS proxy / nameserver on 127.0.0.1 that talks IPv6 will allow it to run on a IPv6 only network once you tell it to talk to 127.0.0.1. named with this named.conf would suffice. Named talks IPv6 by default. options { listen-on { 127.0.0.1; }; }; We did something like this for the IPv6 only experiment at a IETF plenary years ago now. As for buying a exact replacement, thats becoming hard these day.
Remember that people with Windows XP with their ancient version of Internet Explorer already can not access many sites. They don't care.
I believe the real goal is to get to a point, where people will accept the more invasive transition technologies such as NAT64, because everything they care about is IPv6 enabled.
At some point people will start making IPv6 only sites, because everyone they know have IPv6 access. At that point the internet will split into two - the people that have access to the whole thing (IPv6+IPv4) and the IPv4-only people. Yet a lot of those IPv4-only people will stay IPv4-only even though they know they are missing out on something. Because Gmail and Facebook will always be available on IPv4 and that is all they care about.
Actually I don't expect Gmail and Facebook to be IPv4 only forever. Just about all user equipement that talks to these sites is already IPv6 capable including Windows XP. For most homes the only thing holding them back from talking IPv6 is the lack of a IPv6 home router and the ISP being to lazy to deploy it. $50 addresses the first of those problems.
Regards,
Baldur -- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: marka@isc.org