On Apr 11, 2010, at 8:09 AM, Owen DeLong wrote:
>> Part fo the reason folks aren't rushing to the V6 bandwagon is it's not 
>> needed.  Stop doing the chicken little dance folks.  V6 is nice and gives us 
>> tons of more addresses but I can tell you V4 is more than two years form 
>> "dying" just by seeing all the arm flailing going around.
> IPv4 will not die in 2 years.  

I'd wager it won't be dead in 20 years. Of course, a lot depends on what is 
meant by "dying".

> Growth in IPv4 accessible hosts will stop or become significantly more 
> expensive or both in about 2.5 years (+/- 6 months).

Growth stopping is extremely unlikely. Growth becoming significantly more 
expensive is guaranteed.  Address utilization efficiency will increase as 
people see the value in public IPv4 addresses.  ISPs interested in continuing 
to grow will do what it takes to obtain IPv4 addresses and folks with 
allocated-but-unused addresses will be happy to oblige (particularly when they 
accept that they only need a couple of public IP addresses for their entire 
network).  At some point, it may be that the cost of obtaining IPv4 will 
outstrip the cost of migrating to IPv6.  If we're lucky.

Regards,
-drc


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