Op 26-05-16 om 17:52 schreef Chris Murphy:
There is a wide disparity of adoption rate by country, Belgium is nearly at 50% where the U.S. is not yet at even 20% (which might be the result of hogging ipv4 addresses).
https://www.akamai.com/uk/en/our-thinking/state-of-the-internet-report/state...
Can't resist that. I'm from Belgium. The major ISP's give "dynamic" ipv6 prefixes, i.e. when your modem reboots, it gets a new prefix. From Proximus I get a /56 prefix, but it's impossible to get a fixed one, unless you pay for a "professional" account (at a professional price, that's for sure, and prices are high already, here). Before I went to Proximus I was with a small ISP (EDPnet) and they gave me a fixed /56 prefix, as a "consumer" customer. So I find that "adaption rate" exaggerated. Yes, for "dumb" customers, that number is true, but when you're trying to do something more, you're stuck with an ipv6-tunnel. Koenraad. P.S. maybe it's possible to automagically change the ipv6 addresses of my servers when I get a new prefix, but *I* don't know how to do that. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org