
On 2016-04-21 00:57, James Knott wrote:
On 04/20/2016 09:27 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
No, I prefer to wait. I don't see the advantage. I'd perhaps try if it were my ISP which provided the tunnel.
The advantage is you can get IPv6 without having to wait for your ISP. As I mentioned, I've been running IPv6 via tunnel for almost 6 years, but my ISP is only now rolling it out.
Yes, but besides learning, I do not see an advantage with Ipv6. Well, perhaps one: maybe it is a fixed IP, and in that case, I can use that one easily to tell some friends how to connect to one of my computers. Probably without redirecting a port on the router - just opening its firewall, perhaps. I doubt of the router abilities there. I forgot: my friends also will need IPv6, and some do not even know where is the router! Even less if they have IPv6. I have searched a bit, and located more links about my provider, dated 2012 and a bit later, saying that they were going to try IPv6 on 1% of their users. I have not found recent information, not what resulted from the tests. Not promising. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 13.1 x86_64 "Bottle" at Telcontar)