I've found myself becoming a snob about IPv6. I almost look down on IPv4-only networks in the same way that I won't go see a film that isn't projected on DLP unless my arm is twisted. I'm a convert, and I'm glad to see the adoption rate edging up. However, I still scratch my head on why most major US ISPs *have* robust IPv6 peering and infrastructure and are ready to go, but they have not turned it on for their fiber/cable/DSL customers for reasons that are not clear to me. I keep pestering my home ISP about turning it on (since their network is now 100% DOCSIS 3), but they just seem to think I'm making up words. One can hope, though. Blair On Tue, Nov 20, 2012 at 11:53 AM, TJ <trejrco@gmail.com> wrote:
On Tue, 20 Nov 2012 10:14:18 +0100 Tomas Podermanski <tpoder@cis.vutbr.cz> wrote:
It seems that today is a "big day" for IPv6. It is the very first time when native IPv6 on google statistics (http://www.google.com/intl/en/ipv6/statistics.html) reached 1%. Some might say it is tremendous success after 16 years of deploying IPv6 :-)
Funny enough, the peaks are indicating... week-ends ! Do people use more google during the WE, or do they have more IPv6 @ home ?
Purely anecdotally, I can say: Yes. Atleast in my case I have native IPv6 at home and via my mobile devices, but not at my client sites. *Sidenote: That's why I am at those client sites, helping 'fix' that. ;) ... *
/TJ