On 5/9/11 5:06 AM, TJ wrote: > Unfortunately, I suspect many organizations will be following that approach. > > I hope that some will instead see this as a great opportunity for the last > step in making their public services IPv6 reachable *... and that they also > start/continue/complete taking IPv6 within their internal networks as well.*
my ipv6 peering with yahoo came up like 8 months ago... I don't think there's anything particularly unfortunate about what major content providers are doing with ipv6, give them customers and they wil support them. joel > > /TJ > > > On Mon, May 9, 2011 at 04:19, Michael Painter <tvhaw...@shaka.com> wrote: > >> Franck Martin wrote: >> >>> http://help.yahoo.com/l/us/yahoo/ipv6/general/ipv6-05.html >>> "Will IPv6 become a permanent change on June 8, 2011? >>> No. World IPv6 day is a 24-hour trial period in which we will publish our >>> content on both the IPv4 and IPv6 servers. Yahoo! is >>> participating in order to help prepare our services (as well as your >>> hardware) to help ensure a smooth transition for when the >>> IPv4 addresses run out. " >>> >>> Huh… I thought IPv4 addresses had run out already…. >>> >>> At IANA level and now for anyone in the AP region at least. >>> >> >> http://www.apnic.net/policy/add-manage-policy#9.10 >> >> >