How far has the Internet come with IPv6 Adoption?
Ted Mittelstaedt
tedm at ipinc.net
Wed Apr 20 17:25:08 CEST 2011
On 4/20/2011 7:50 AM, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ wrote:
> I've not read the study, but it is normal that there is no native IPv6
> traffic,
they didn't say there was NO native IPv6 traffic.
and it will not be there for long time, possibly until we reach
> 40-50% of ISP, deploying dual stack in the last mile.
>
> If they measure transition traffic, the picture will be much different,
> because the peer-to-peer traffic.
>
They did. If you think there's a problem with the study then
have ATLAS send you a darknet probe and stick it on your network.
Ted
> Regards,
> Jordi
>
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Mensaje original-----
> De: "Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols"<sjvn at vna1.com>
> Organización: Vaughan-Nichols& Associates
> Responder a: "Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols"<sjvn at vna1.com>
> Fecha: Wed, 20 Apr 2011 10:40:54 -0400
> Para:<ipv6-ops at lists.cluenet.de>
> Asunto: How far has the Internet come with IPv6 Adoption?
>
>> Nothing like far enough according to Arbor Networks¹ study.
>>
>> http://www.zdnet.com/blog/networking/how-far-has-the-internet-come-with-ip
>> v6-adoption/967
>>
>> Not that's that news to anyone here, but Arbor has the numbers to back
>> it up.
>>
>> Steven
>>
>> --
>> Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
>> Editor-in-Chief, Practical Technology: http://www.practical-tech.com
>> QOTD: "It is never too late to be what you might have been."--George
>> Eliot
>>
>
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>
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