On Sun, Sep 25, 2016, at 23:27, Mark Andrews wrote: > But it shows that if you turn on IPv6 on the servers you will get > IPv6 traffic. We are no longer is a world where turning on IPv6 > got you a handful of connections. There are billions of devices > that can talk IPv6 to you today the moment you allow them to.
I know, but for the "server guys" turning on IPv6 it's pretty low on priority list. > Can all your customers talk IPv6 to you? No. > It the proportion of customers that can talk IPv6 to you increasing? > Yes. My customers are eyeballs. Residential ones have dual-stack by default, business - some have, some don't and some explicitly refuse (or ask for v6 to be disabled). > Is somewhere between 11-14% worldwide enough for you to invest the > time to turn on IPv6 enough? It should be. Since they (the 11-14% worldwide) do have IPv4 anyway, some consider it's not worth; at least not yet. The issue with IPv6 deployment it's not as simple as some people suggest. It's not a technical problem either, but it's a big one.