At 1/13/2011 10:00 AM, GregI wrote:
>I've got a small network with a MT RB-750 and UBNT (PS2's, NSL2's, 
>NSLM5's, NSM5's and a BulletM2) and I'm wondering how we're going to 
>fair if/when our upstream throws the switch on IPv6. I'd like to 
>hear someone else is already doing it.
>
>Our "upstream" apparently is Hughesnet being resold in South 
>America. I'm not sure if their system/our modem is IPv6 
>capable/ready. That may keep us on IPv4 and tunneled/nat'ed to IPv6 
>for some time.

Personal opinion:  IPv6 is worth less than the paper its RFC is 
printed on. Ignore it and it will go away.  Really.

If one of your subscribers really needs to reach something only 
accessible via IPv6, they can tunnel out.  But since there is no 
compatibility, the "transition" plan requires dual stack.  So 
everything runs v4 until everybody is on v6.  But since there's 
always more on v4 (everybody) than on v6 (those who have added the 
dual stack), there's no incentive for users to move to v4.  The only 
benefit is to some ISPs, not to users.  So users have little reason 
to move.  (Sometimes users are smarter than some ISPs.)  Plus v6 is 
an abomination, a misdesign of immense proportions, so you shouldn't 
buy into Cisco's fantasies.

  --
  Fred Goldstein    k1io   fgoldstein "at" ionary.com
  ionary Consulting              http://www.ionary.com/
  +1 617 795 2701 



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