On 3 Oct 2019, at 16:02, Jens Link <lists@quux.de> wrote:
Tim Chown <Tim.Chown@jisc.ac.uk> writes:
(Surprised we’re having this conversation in 2019, as the final fumes of IPv4 address space disappear from Europe…)
If you had told me 10 or even 5 years ago that I would be having the conversation in 2019 I would have laughed at you. Now it's a very sad situation. IPv4 has won.
I had a discussion over lunch about v6 yesterday (which is part of the reason I started this today) and all I heard "but that is different then IPv4. I don't like this!"
There will always be a legacy tail. The dinosaurs can wallow in their swamp. Those who deploy v6 will benefit from it. Others will feel the heat of not moving; here in the UK it’s Sky and BT who have between them ~10M households on IPv6. That’s not failure. New communities will benefit. For example, the largest science experiments are now migrating to IPv6, e.g., CERN and WLCG is 70% there, SKA will use it. Tim