One of the simplest ways to start is to go to SIXXS, or TunnelBroker or both, 
and get an allocation of v6 space.   I use v6 though a tunnel at home, and it's 
not bad (originally I set it up to get the Beijing Olympics, which had a free 
IPv6 feed of all the events.)   As opposed to what others where saying it's 
transparent, at least on Macs.   I use an Apple Airport Base Station with a 
tunnel to TunnelBroker, and I use SIXXS with there dynamic tunnel on my laptop. 
 

One comment to Bill about v4 space running out, all those predictions are based 
on ARIN allocations.   The v4 space will then be in the hands of the ISPs, 
except for those places that got allocations before you had to be an ISP (BBN, 
for example.)   Since the resource is limited, there will be an aftermarket (I 
believe the space says that it goes back ARIN if you don't need/want it 
anymore, but people will just shove the ownership of the space into a holding 
company, and sell the company with the space.)  The bottom line is we are in 
the end stage of a landrush, then the space will get a market value (I know I 
sound like a freemarket guy now.)  

So yes, there are all these people running around saying it's the end of the 
internet when space runs out.   But I believe it will be a non-event.   

Right now the internet is v4 with bubbles of v6 connected via tunnels to each 
other.   Slowly at first those bubbles will grow, and merge, and eventually one 
day we'll all wake up and realize that it's now v6 with pockets of v4.   I 
kinda look at this the same way things where in the 1980s most of the world was 
UUCP, with pockets of v4, and PPP.   

johno


On Mar 12, 2010, at 8:13 AM, Edward Ned Harvey wrote:

>> Is there anyone who has IPv6 running on their internal networks?
>> Are you using it for real operations or is this just for fun?
>> What issues with apps/server software/routers/network appliances did
>> you run into?
>> What (if anything) have you done to get IPv6 connectivity to the
>> outside world?
>> 
>> I would love to have someone give a presentation on this general
>> topic, but I think even a roundtable presentation by people with
>> actual experience would be valuable.
> 
> I'd love to hear more / learn more about this too.  Good question Bill.  I
> have a goal to at least experimentally rollout IPv6 for work, but haven't
> started on it any more than just picking up a book.
> 
> 
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