Given that virtually all of the "popular" applications are ignorant of
the underlying infrastructure I don't see this happening. Its simply
too expensive to build something and not get it in front of as many
eyeballs as possible even (perhaps especially) if your application is
free (ad supported). We've only seen the large scale shift to
applications really being mobile aware in the last few years. Anyone
else remember when WAP was supposed to (and didn't) make a huge splash
on mobile web use?
One thing they can do, and I would live to see some popular destination
site do this, is to say something like:
"we have this really cool new thing we are rolling out but, sorry, it is
available only via IPv6" or "we will continue supporting all of today's
features on v4 but all new features will be rolled out on v6 only".
That would result in eyeballs demanding access to that content and
nothing drives innovation like customer demand does.
--
Scott Helms
Vice President of Technology
ISP Alliance, Inc. DBA ZCorum
(678) 507-5000
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http://twitter.com/kscotthelms
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