On 11/26/2012 03:18 PM, Dobbins, Roland wrote:
> 
> Apple and Microsoft are application developers as well as OS vendors.  How 
> much of a priority do you think IPv6 capabilities are to their application 
> development organizations?  How much of a priority do you think IPv6 
> capabilities are to their customer bases?
> 
> How much of a priority do you think IPv6 capabilities are for corporate IT 
> departments, beyond a checklist item on RFPs in order to CYA?
> 
> Where are the IPv6-only SQL Server deployments within enterprises, for 
> example?  In fact, where are the IPv6-enabled client access LANs within 
> enterprises?  Or even the *plans* for these types of deployments/capabilities?


How much of a priority?  I would say lots for Apple.  Have you looked at the 
current Apple software?  It pretty much "just works" on IPv6.  IPv6 is on by 
default on end systems. Airport Extreme is listed as IPv6 compatible by, among 
other companies, Comcast.  In Terminal, open an New Remote Connection to 
another Mac, do netstat -f inet6 and see that it is an IPv6 connection. 
Actually, it is more than a priority. It is pretty much a done deal.

As for corporate IT departments, it depends on whether management is measured 
on monthly cash flow or by long term growth.  I must note that many corporate 
IT departments have evolved from "No one gets fired for buying IBM." to "One 
might get fired for not buying Microsoft." This also automatically brings along 
IPv6 capabilities.

<DIGRESSION>
Elsewhere it has been said that end users don't care about IPv6.  Well, that is 
generally true.  They also don't care about IPv4, DOCSIS 3, ATM, PPPOE, and 
lots of other technical acronyms.  What they do care about is reliable sharing 
of gossip, pictures, and videos.  They also care about reliable video chats 
with friends and family. 

To meet these expectations in a long term cost-effective manner, it behooves us 
network and content providers to remove all IPv4-forced hacks impeding easy 
end-system to end-system connections like all those 'wonderful' variants of NAT 
and artificially high pricing for IPv6.  When the marketing folks begins to 
treat IPv6 as a sales enabler rather than a fanciful cost item, then we may see 
accelerated deployment of IPv6 alongside IPv4.
</DIGRESSION>

Reply via email to