FWIW, I have had IPv6 for many years on my Spectrum (formerly Time Warner) connection at home. I think it was ~2012 or so. On our company fiber connection, it has been since ~2010, maybe a little earlier. Granted it took a little pressure and I’m sure were were the first IPv6 business customer in our area.
-Randy > On Mar 31, 2019, at 16:32, David Hubbard <dhubb...@dino.hostasaurus.com> > wrote: > > Things are no better in Spectrum land; gotta love the innovation in monopoly > markets…. I ask every year and expect it in perhaps thirty. > > From: NANOG <nanog-boun...@nanog.org> on behalf of "Aaron C. de Bruyn via > NANOG" <nanog@nanog.org> > Reply-To: "Aaron C. de Bruyn" <aa...@heyaaron.com> > Date: Sunday, March 31, 2019 at 4:26 PM > To: "C. A. Fillekes" <cfille...@gmail.com> > Cc: NANOG mailing list <nanog@nanog.org> > Subject: Re: Frontier rural FIOS & IPv6 > > You're not alone. > > I talked with my local provider about 4 years ago and they said "We will > probably start looking into IPv6 next year". > I talked with them last month and they said "Yeah, everyone seems to be > offering it. I guess I'll have to start reading how to implement it". > > I'm sure 2045 will finally be the year of IPv6 everywhere. > > -A > > On Sat, Mar 30, 2019 at 7:36 AM C. A. Fillekes <cfille...@gmail.com> wrote: > > So by COB yesterday we now officially have FIOS at our farm. > > Went from 3Mbps to around 30 measured average. Yay. > > It's a business account, Frontier. But...still no IPv6. > > The new router's capable of it. What's the hold up? > > Customer service's response is "We don't offer that". > > > > >