On 19/08/2011, at 4:18 AM, Owen DeLong wrote:

It'd really suck for end users to start actively avoiding IPv6 connectivity 
because it keeps breaking and for organisations that have active AAAA records 
to break peoples connectivity to their resources.



+1 -- I'm all for publishing AAAA records as everyone knows, but, if you 
publish AAAA records for a consumer facing service, please support and monitor 
that service with a similar level to what you do for your IPv4 versions of the 
service.

The coming years are going to be difficult enough for end-users without adding 
unnecessary anti-IPv6 sentiments to the mix.

Owen

+1 to Owen's comment.

I'd also add some more comments:

A lot of eyeballs that have v6 right now are the people with a lot of clue.  Do 
you want these people, who'll often be buying or recommending your services to 
rate your ability to deliver as a fail?  Our experience with IPv6 consumer 
broadband has been that the early adopters are the people who, well, goto IETF 
meetings, follow standards and ask the bloody hard questions.

Even given the Happy Eyeballs (Did Hurricane PAY for it to be abbrievated as 
HE?? :-) ) most end users prefer IPv6 over IPv4.  Deeply this means there is a 
tendency for v6 traffic to grow and be more important to connectivity than you 
may imagine.  The tipping point for IPv6 traffic being dominant I suspect is 
going to be a lower threshold of take up than people might expect.   Consider 
this when thinking about the level of thought you give to IPv6 infrastructure 
and PPS rates.

MMC

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