jdd wrote:
Le 10/09/2016 à 09:12, Per Jessen a écrit :
According to
https://www.akamai.com/uk/en/our-thinking/state-of-the-internet-report/state...
in order of size of deployment, the lead countries are Belgium, Greece, Germany, Switzerland, USA, Portugal, Luxembourg, Ecuador, Estonia, Peru, France, UK. Some countries are way behind, but unless you live in one of those, it's not fair to say "using IPV6 is not an option, not really in the wild".
with 22% for the USA, do you think it's possible to use freely IPV6 and drop IPV4??
jdd, we're not talking about dropping ipv4 (although it is a possiblity if your provider has a 6to4 gateway), but about adding/using IPv6.
if this report means anything. because what is relevant is the main servers/ISP acceptation of IPV6.
Anyone running more than a hobby webserver that is not on IPv6 is way behind, IMHO. The Akamai study/report presumably shows their clients, so essentially the ISPs serving the end-user.
I too often notice that allowing IPV6 brake the home connectivity...
Where do you notice this? That is almost certainly due to a lack of skills and/or poor equipment. Either at home or at the providers. -- Per Jessen, Zürich (20.9°C) http://www.hostsuisse.com/ - virtual servers, made in Switzerland. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org