On 18-jul-2005, at 18:31, Kuhtz, Christian wrote:
If there is pressure to adopt IPv6 rapidly in a given region, and that given region also happens to drive broadband technology evolution, and North America ends up being dependent on cheap equipment primarily driven by overseas standards..
I don't see this. For instance, the need for non-ASCII characters in (for instance) Asian languages has pushed Unicode. Modern systems in NA are all capable of using Unicode. But do users in NA actually _use_ Unicode? ASCII works fine for them 99% of the time. Same thing with IPv6. Windows and MacOS have had IPv6 on board for years. Doesn't mean people use it.
The key questions are
When will who you want to talk to speak IPv6?
That's a key question when you've made up your mind to be one of the last to adopt IPv6. The real key question is: when will it start to make sense to use IPv6 for my own stuff, regardless of what the rest of the world does? In an enterprise environment the ease of never again having to think about how many hosts are going to end up in the same subnet alone may be quite compelling. But it only makes sense when you can turn off IPv4 in most of the network and proxy or translate communications to the outside.