On Tue, May 22, 2012 at 10:18 PM, Randy Carpenter <rcar...@network1.net> wrote: > I suppose they are selectively letting certain devices in some areas. I get > "der duh, what?" when I ask about it. >
uhm... you asked someone at their kiosks/stores about ipv<anything>?? you are a very, very brave man. > It certainly does not work on the iPad "3" in Ohio. Not only that, but I > can't even pay them to give me a stable IPv4 address, because if you get a > static IP, it disables the hotspot functionality. Head-->Wall. > good times!! mobile carriers live in what seems like a very different world from the one the rest of the internet lives in :( (cameron's folk aside, where there are still some oddities, at least you can get working ipv6, and mostly working v4... or working enough that I can tether my phone and vpn over that connection when necessary) -chris > thanks, > -Randy > > ----- Original Message ----- >> On Tue, May 22, 2012 at 10:07 PM, Randy Carpenter >> <rcar...@network1.net> wrote: >> > >> > Not only does Verizon *not* have IPv6 on their LTE network, they >> > also do *not* have IPv4, except for double-NATed rfc1918 crap that >> > changes your IP address every couple minutes. The only way to get >> > a stable connection is to pay them $500 to get a static public IP >> > address. >> > >> >> wierd, I could swear someone in my office with a galaxy-nexus-on-vzw >> was able to browse some ipv6-only sites. >> >>