> Hi Jordi,
> 
> That could be a useful list to have somewhere, thanks for that.
> 
>> On 19 May 2016, at 00:22, Colin Petrie <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> On 18/05/16 20:45, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ wrote:
>>> So here are the questions for actual IPv6 services providers to residential 
>>> customers:
>>> 1) What prefix size is provided?
>>> 2) Is that prefix static or dynamic?
>>> 3) In case is dynamic, there is a chance for static?
>>> 4) Any extra cost for having it static, or having a bigger prefix (i.e., 
>>> /48 instead of /56)?
>>> 5) If the customer has already a static IPv4 with a monthly charge, is 
>>> still IPv6 static prefix being charged on top of that?
>> 
>> A related question that is not on the list above:
>> 6) Can the customer delegate reverse DNS for the assigned IPv6 prefix?
>> 6a) If the prefix is static, can they use an NS delegation?
>> 6b) If the prefix is dynamic, can they consistently DNAME it to a
>> customer-hosted zone that contains PTRs for 'some-subnet-size'?
>> 
>> Of course, most residential customers probably don't care. But I mention
>> it as both a DNS and IPv6 geek. It's something to consider.
> 
> Would it be a lot of work to add 2 or 3 columns regarding the IPv4 support?
> 
> 7) Do you still provide native IPv4 support?
> 7a) globally routable address? yes/no, static/dynamic?
> 7b) NAT444 (CGN) or DS-lite
> 7c) NAT64 or 464-Xlat

Still early, sorry for the reply to self.

Maybe it is useful if it is organised based on type of network: 
wireless/wireline and/or carrier (cable, DSL, wifi, GSM). There might be 
differences in type of service based on the carrier.

Marco

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