Remember, the Internet being fully migrated to IPv6 is just 5 yrs away just like fusion power plants is 20 yrs away (although I think now they are saying 50 yrs away which would make IPv6 12.5 yrs away). (=
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -ITG (ITechGeek) i...@itechgeek.com https://itg.nu/ GPG Keys: https://itg.nu/contact/gpg-key Preferred GPG Key: Fingerprint: AB46B7E363DA7E04ABFA57852AA9910A DCB1191A Google Voice: +1-703-493-0128 / Twitter: ITechGeek / Facebook: http://fb.me/Jbwa.Net On Thu, Sep 24, 2015 at 4:06 PM, Mike Hammett <na...@ics-il.net> wrote: > ===== > The whole reason for the inertia > against going to IPv6 is "it ain't broke, so I not gonna 'fix' it." > > Now it's broke. > ===== > > ^^^^^^^This ^^^^^^^^^^^ > > > > > ----- > Mike Hammett > Intelligent Computing Solutions > http://www.ics-il.com > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: "Stephen Satchell" <l...@satchell.net> > To: nanog@nanog.org > Sent: Thursday, September 24, 2015 2:38:26 PM > Subject: Re: ARIN Region IPv4 Free Pool Reaches Zero > > On 09/24/2015 09:49 AM, Dovid Bender wrote: > > The issue now is convincing clients that they need it. The other > > issue is many software vendors still don't support it. > > And this may trigger a refresh on routers, as people old or refurbed > equipment find they need to change. The whole reason for the inertia > against going to IPv6 is "it ain't broke, so I not gonna 'fix' it." > > Now it's broke. > >