Harald,

Your Half percent is great!

When Tim Berners-Lee presented the www at the JENC conference in
Insbruck in 1992, he said that according to the traffic mesurement
statistics, the www-related trafic is around half percent.

What was the ratio two years later? 40%

Half percent is a good "start" for a real revolution.

The question is: where is any similar movement to those pushed the web
development in the early nineties?

Best,
         Géza

On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 9:38 PM, Harald Alvestrand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> David Kessens wrote:
>>
>> Joe,
>>
>> On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 08:20:11AM -0800, Joe St Sauver wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> I'm not aware of DNS block lists which cover IPv6 address spaces at
>>> this time, probably in part because IPv6 traffic remains de minimis (see
>>> http://asert.arbornetworks.com/2008/8/the-end-is-near-but-is-ipv6/
>>> showing IPv6 traffic as constituting only 0.002% of all Internet
>>> traffic).
>>>
>>
>> For the record:
>> It seems that arbornetworks estimates are extremely low to the point
>> where one has to ask whether there were other issues that caused such
>> a low estimate.
>>
>> There is no question that IPv6 traffic is quite low in the Internet.
>> However, many other reports that I have seen recently measure multiple
>> orders of magnitude more IPv6 traffic (for an easily accesible example
>> see: http://www.ams-ix.net/technical/stats/sflow/)
>
> Google's measurements indicate that when faced with a dual-stack host (one
> with both an AAAA and an A record in the DNS), 0.5% of all hosts will access
> that host using IPv6.
>
> (As presented at the RIPE meeting in Dubai last month.)
>
>                   Harald
>
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