>> It's just  they keep getting postponed because if other things which 
>> are either more urgent or more important.
>> I'd not be surprised if IPv6 deployments suffer from the same issue quite 
>> often.

>I think this is spot on; IPv6 never makes it to the top of the list for most 
>organisations.

>The difference is when something critical comes along that changes that.

I agree, I see this often. 

But to keep spirits high, I must say that I also see customers that work on it 
consistently and with a realistic long term perspective with no emergency 
pressure and even keep going in these crazy Corona times.  I guess our 
impression of what is going on and what not is also very often limited, because 
unless we're involved, we don't know much about such initiatives.

There is hope.

Silvia

-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: ipv6-wg <[email protected]> Im Auftrag von Tim Chown
Gesendet: Freitag, 1. Mai 2020 11:04
An: Jen Linkova <[email protected]>
Cc: Jens Link <[email protected]>; [email protected] IPv6 <[email protected]>
Betreff: Re: [ipv6-wg] RIPE80 Call for Presentations

> On 1 May 2020, at 04:44, Jen Linkova <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I'd not assume that IPv6 is not getting deployed (only) because it's 
> hard or because of the technical difficulties.
> Maybe you are more lucky but I personally have a lot of things on my 
> 'would be nice to get done' list - and none of them are hard to do. 
> It's just  they keep getting postponed because if other things which 
> are either more urgent or more important.
> I'd not be surprised if IPv6 deployments suffer from the same issue quite 
> often.

I think this is spot on; IPv6 never makes it to the top of the list for most 
organisations.

The difference is when something critical comes along that changes that. 

Tim



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