You are mistaken. If you only need one /64, you cannot possibly be an IPv6 ISP.
As such, you would only pay the end-user price of $1250 one-time and $100/year. That $100/year also covers your IPv4 space and your autonomous system number. Owen On Apr 8, 2010, at 4:18 PM, Gary E. Miller wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Yo Owen! > > Since I just need one /64 that is $1,250/yr for the /64. > > That puts me at a large competitive disadvantage to the big boys. > > RGDS > GARY > - --------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Gary E. Miller Rellim 109 NW Wilmington Ave., Suite E, Bend, OR 97701 > g...@rellim.com Tel:+1(541)382-8588 > > On Thu, 8 Apr 2010, Owen DeLong wrote: > >> This assumes that small = /40 and large = /22. >> >> Still, with more realistic numbers: >> >> The small guy (/48) pays $0.019073486 per /64 >> The large guy (/24) pays $0.000000032741808 per /64 >> >> FWIW. >> >> Owen >> >> On Apr 7, 2010, at 2:48 PM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote: >> >>> On Wed, 07 Apr 2010 14:17:49 PDT, "Gary E. Miller" said: >>> >>>> Then scroll down to the fees you can expect in 2013. Especially note >>>> how the small guys get hit much harder per IP. >>> >>> The small guys pay: $0.000074505805969 per /64. ($1250 / (2^(64-40)) >>> The big guys pay: $0.000000008185452 per /64. ($36000 / (2^(64-22)) >>> >>> The small guys are still paying less than 1/100th of a penny per /64. >>> Assuming >>> your salary plus overhead is $40/hour, each *second* of your time is worth >>> more than the cost of 150 /64s. >>> >>> Oh, the inhumanity. >> >> >> > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v1.4.3 (GNU/Linux) > > iD8DBQFLvmQxBmnRqz71OvMRAr2dAKC4BrqBI94hvvyKEa+mLh4oML7yVwCfScFR > 60z+bDBMHOvTRQwQJPW6SCo= > =9zBu > -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----