Re: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

2011-10-21 Thread Andrew Allen

+1

We can put all kinds of wonderful constraints on hotels if we want to - make 
sure they are enviromental friendly, non discriminatory in their hiring 
practices, donate to save whales and all kinds of other worthy causes and do 
things such as transitioning to IPv6 plus be really cheap and be in interesting 
and cheap to get to locations - then we will likely never be able to meet 
anywhere.

IF IPv6 really requires IETF to use its business to influence hotels to adopt 
it then its a technolgy that deserves to go the way of the DoDo. IPv6 will be 
adopted because it is needed and brings commerical benefits to those that 
deploy it.

 

- Original Message -
From: Cullen Jennings [mailto:flu...@cisco.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 20, 2011 11:57 PM
To: George, Wes wesley.geo...@twcable.com
Cc: i...@ietf.org i...@ietf.org; ietf@ietf.org ietf@ietf.org
Subject: Re: IPv6 support in hotel contract?


We just failed to manager to find a venue in Asia because there was no venue 
that meant all the constraints. I'd rather not add more constraints to the 
hotel selection. I love the taste of dog food, but v6 in the hotel is not 
something that I find critical to accomplish the task I come to IETF to get 
done. 


On Oct 20, 2011, at 7:01 AM, George, Wes wrote:

 My last message caused something else to occur to me – there has been a lot 
 of discussion both here and at NANOG about hotels being woefully 
 underprepared for the internet (and address) use that their guests generate 
 when a conference full of geeks and their multiple devices per person descend 
 upon them. Sometimes the IETF is successful at convincing the hotel to let 
 them take over the internet service in the guest rooms, sometimes not.
  
 Perhaps we can kill two birds with one stone by starting to require IPv6 
 service in the guest rooms when we enter into negotiations with hotels. If 
 they don’t have it, we’ll be happy to temporarily take over the internet 
 service, or assist them in getting it enabled permanently in their existing 
 network, and if neither of those options are acceptable, it provides 
 negotiating leverage on other things. This also has the net effect of 
 starting to make it clear to hotel management that IPv6 is going to start 
 being mandatory for some subset of their guests before too much longer.
  
 I realize that having something in the contract doesn’t mean that we’re any 
 more likely to get it. But the fact that it’s in the contract makes a 
 statement in and of itself. IAOC, any reason why this couldn’t be added, 
 especially given how far in advance you’re negotiating with venues?
  
 Thanks,
  
 Wes George
  
 
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RE: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

2011-10-21 Thread George, Wes
 From: Andrew Allen [mailto:aal...@rim.com]
 We can put all kinds of wonderful constraints on hotels if we want to -
 [snip] - then we will likely never be able to meet anywhere.

[WEG] I am not suggesting that this be a deal-breaker constraint. We have quite 
a number of nice to have items that we will ask for, but not necessarily take 
our business elsewhere if we do not get. The sense I get from IAOC is that 
dates, capacity, and cost are the constraints. IPv6 support is window dressing 
(or deck chairs, depending on your perspective).

 IF IPv6 really requires IETF to use its business to influence hotels to
 adopt it then its a technolgy that deserves to go the way of the DoDo.
 IPv6 will be adopted because it is needed and brings commerical
 benefits to those that deploy it.

[WEG] This is not an attempt to force *whether* IPv6 will be deployed, but 
when. Hotels are sort of an extension of the consumer space - right now, they 
don't know/care what IPv6 is, nor see a reason why it's necessary. It is quite 
unlikely that your average person will walk to the counter and say, your 
internet service is partially broken because it doesn't support IPv6. It is 
even less likely that this will happen enough times that they say, gosh, 
perhaps we need to look into this eye pee vee six thing... IETF has some 
leverage, and by definition should be on the early adopter curve, so I'm simply 
suggesting that they use it to accelerate the timeline a bit.

 From: Cullen Jennings [mailto:flu...@cisco.com]
 I love the taste of dog food, but v6 in the hotel is not something that I 
 find critical to accomplish the
 task I come to IETF to get done.

[WEG] We're working contracts for hotel venues 3+ years out at this point. How 
long are you willing to assume that IPv6 will not be critical to tasks that you 
need to do at IETF and that the IPv4 service in the hotel will be an acceptable 
alternative?

Wes George

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Re: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

2011-10-21 Thread Andrew Allen

George

I think its fine to sell them on the advantages of transitioning but some 
others were advocating to have it in the contract.

Any additional costs you place on the hotel will inevitably be reclaimed (with 
interest) in the room charges, cost of breaks, etc - there is no such thing as 
a free lunch!

- Original Message -
From: George, Wes [mailto:wesley.geo...@twcable.com]
Sent: Friday, October 21, 2011 08:06 AM
To: Andrew Allen; flu...@cisco.com flu...@cisco.com
Cc: i...@ietf.org i...@ietf.org; ietf@ietf.org ietf@ietf.org
Subject: RE: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

 From: Andrew Allen [mailto:aal...@rim.com]
 We can put all kinds of wonderful constraints on hotels if we want to -
 [snip] - then we will likely never be able to meet anywhere.

[WEG] I am not suggesting that this be a deal-breaker constraint. We have quite 
a number of nice to have items that we will ask for, but not necessarily take 
our business elsewhere if we do not get. The sense I get from IAOC is that 
dates, capacity, and cost are the constraints. IPv6 support is window dressing 
(or deck chairs, depending on your perspective).

 IF IPv6 really requires IETF to use its business to influence hotels to
 adopt it then its a technolgy that deserves to go the way of the DoDo.
 IPv6 will be adopted because it is needed and brings commerical
 benefits to those that deploy it.

[WEG] This is not an attempt to force *whether* IPv6 will be deployed, but 
when. Hotels are sort of an extension of the consumer space - right now, they 
don't know/care what IPv6 is, nor see a reason why it's necessary. It is quite 
unlikely that your average person will walk to the counter and say, your 
internet service is partially broken because it doesn't support IPv6. It is 
even less likely that this will happen enough times that they say, gosh, 
perhaps we need to look into this eye pee vee six thing... IETF has some 
leverage, and by definition should be on the early adopter curve, so I'm simply 
suggesting that they use it to accelerate the timeline a bit.

 From: Cullen Jennings [mailto:flu...@cisco.com]
 I love the taste of dog food, but v6 in the hotel is not something that I 
 find critical to accomplish the
 task I come to IETF to get done.

[WEG] We're working contracts for hotel venues 3+ years out at this point. How 
long are you willing to assume that IPv6 will not be critical to tasks that you 
need to do at IETF and that the IPv4 service in the hotel will be an acceptable 
alternative?

Wes George

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the intended recipient of this E-mail, you are hereby notified that any 
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unlawful. If you have received this E-mail in error, please notify the sender 
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any printout.

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RE: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

2011-10-21 Thread Cameron Byrne
On Oct 21, 2011 6:07 AM, George, Wes wesley.geo...@twcable.com wrote:

  From: Andrew Allen [mailto:aal...@rim.com]
  We can put all kinds of wonderful constraints on hotels if we want to -
  [snip] - then we will likely never be able to meet anywhere.
 
 [WEG] I am not suggesting that this be a deal-breaker constraint. We have
quite a number of nice to have items that we will ask for, but not
necessarily take our business elsewhere if we do not get. The sense I get
from IAOC is that dates, capacity, and cost are the constraints. IPv6
support is window dressing (or deck chairs, depending on your perspective).


There is no harm in putting it in as a nice to have, and this is the type
of thing makes a good tie-breaker and puts ipv6 on the radar.

If the ietf cannot even make this simple request (not even a requirement),
we are in a sad sad state.

Cb

  IF IPv6 really requires IETF to use its business to influence hotels to
  adopt it then its a technolgy that deserves to go the way of the DoDo.
  IPv6 will be adopted because it is needed and brings commerical
  benefits to those that deploy it.

 [WEG] This is not an attempt to force *whether* IPv6 will be deployed, but
when. Hotels are sort of an extension of the consumer space - right now,
they don't know/care what IPv6 is, nor see a reason why it's necessary. It
is quite unlikely that your average person will walk to the counter and say,
your internet service is partially broken because it doesn't support IPv6.
It is even less likely that this will happen enough times that they say,
gosh, perhaps we need to look into this eye pee vee six thing... IETF has
some leverage, and by definition should be on the early adopter curve, so
I'm simply suggesting that they use it to accelerate the timeline a bit.

  From: Cullen Jennings [mailto:flu...@cisco.com]
  I love the taste of dog food, but v6 in the hotel is not something that
I find critical to accomplish the
  task I come to IETF to get done.

 [WEG] We're working contracts for hotel venues 3+ years out at this point.
How long are you willing to assume that IPv6 will not be critical to tasks
that you need to do at IETF and that the IPv4 service in the hotel will be
an acceptable alternative?

 Wes George

 This E-mail and any of its attachments may contain Time Warner Cable
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RE: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

2011-10-21 Thread Ross Callon
I agree with Cullen (except that I don't love the taste of dog food). Asking 
for IPv6 might be a good idea, but the full group of IETF participants as a 
group aren't the right people to negotiate hotel contracts, and finding a hotel 
that is reasonably priced and has the capacity to host an IETF appears to be 
hard enough as it is. 

Ross

-Original Message-
From: ietf-boun...@ietf.org [mailto:ietf-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Cullen 
Jennings
Sent: Friday, October 21, 2011 12:58 AM
To: George, Wes
Cc: i...@ietf.org; ietf@ietf.org
Subject: Re: IPv6 support in hotel contract?


We just failed to manager to find a venue in Asia because there was no venue 
that meant all the constraints. I'd rather not add more constraints to the 
hotel selection. I love the taste of dog food, but v6 in the hotel is not 
something that I find critical to accomplish the task I come to IETF to get 
done. 


On Oct 20, 2011, at 7:01 AM, George, Wes wrote:

 My last message caused something else to occur to me - there has been a lot 
 of discussion both here and at NANOG about hotels being woefully 
 underprepared for the internet (and address) use that their guests generate 
 when a conference full of geeks and their multiple devices per person descend 
 upon them. Sometimes the IETF is successful at convincing the hotel to let 
 them take over the internet service in the guest rooms, sometimes not.
  
 Perhaps we can kill two birds with one stone by starting to require IPv6 
 service in the guest rooms when we enter into negotiations with hotels. If 
 they don't have it, we'll be happy to temporarily take over the internet 
 service, or assist them in getting it enabled permanently in their existing 
 network, and if neither of those options are acceptable, it provides 
 negotiating leverage on other things. This also has the net effect of 
 starting to make it clear to hotel management that IPv6 is going to start 
 being mandatory for some subset of their guests before too much longer.
  
 I realize that having something in the contract doesn't mean that we're any 
 more likely to get it. But the fact that it's in the contract makes a 
 statement in and of itself. IAOC, any reason why this couldn't be added, 
 especially given how far in advance you're negotiating with venues?
  
 Thanks,
  
 Wes George
  
 
 This E-mail and any of its attachments may contain Time Warner Cable 
 proprietary information, which is privileged, confidential, or subject to 
 copyright belonging to Time Warner Cable. This E-mail is intended solely for 
 the use of the individual or entity to which it is addressed. If you are not 
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 dissemination, distribution, copying, or action taken in relation to the 
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Re: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

2011-10-20 Thread TJ
+1 ... Whether it works or not, it's atleast worth the effort!

/TJ
On Oct 20, 2011 8:07 AM, George, Wes wesley.geo...@twcable.com wrote:

  My last message caused something else to occur to me – there has been a
 lot of discussion both here and at NANOG about hotels being woefully
 underprepared for the internet (and address) use that their guests generate
 when a conference full of geeks and their multiple devices per person
 descend upon them. Sometimes the IETF is successful at convincing the hotel
 to let them take over the internet service in the guest rooms, sometimes
 not.

 ** **

 Perhaps we can kill two birds with one stone by starting to require IPv6
 service in the guest rooms when we enter into negotiations with hotels. If
 they don’t have it, we’ll be happy to temporarily take over the internet
 service, or assist them in getting it enabled permanently in their existing
 network, and if neither of those options are acceptable, it provides
 negotiating leverage on other things. This also has the net effect of
 starting to make it clear to hotel management that IPv6 is going to start
 being mandatory for some subset of their guests before too much longer. **
 **

 ** **

 I realize that having something in the contract doesn’t mean that we’re any
 more likely to get it. But the fact that it’s in the contract makes a
 statement in and of itself. IAOC, any reason why this couldn’t be added,
 especially given how far in advance you’re negotiating with venues?

 ** **

 Thanks,

 ** **

 Wes George

 ** **

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RE: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

2011-10-20 Thread George, Wes
 From: Joel jaeggli [mailto:joe...@bogus.com]

  At least, we should start *trying* to get IPv6 service from hotels.
  We may have a very hard time getting it, but the fact that customers
  are starting to *ask* for it will help make hotels aware of IPv6.

 I see no pointing in asking for something that a hotel agent is going
 to
 not be able to respond to.

 if you want a brown M  M's crontract you're going to actually have to
 work with an agent that can grok and then meet your requirements.

[WEG]] Joel, I think this is a spurious line of logic. We already have plenty 
of brown MMs requirements. We bring in our own internet access (sometimes by 
running new fiber into the building). We ask for the ability to take over the 
hotel's guest room wireless network or at least the uplink. If we get told no, 
we try (I hope) to ask about their abilities to cope with an extremely high 
amount of simultaneous internet usage, we ask lots of questions about the 
technical logistics of putting on a conference of this size, including using 
their power and cabling to provide wireless in common areas, interacting with 
their PA system, using their equipment, etc, and the hotel agent either 
answers them directly or finds someone who can.
We don't generally work with Roscoe's Motor Lodge whose internet service is a 
single residential AP managed by my brother Darrel. These are international 
hotel chains, usually with contracts to national/international corporations to 
professionally manage their guest internet services. If we ask, the response is 
likely to be well, no one's ever asked for that before... but that should be 
followed with ...but we'll find out...

Wes George

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RE: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

2011-10-20 Thread David Morris


On Thu, 20 Oct 2011, George, Wes wrote:

  From: Joel jaeggli [mailto:joe...@bogus.com]
 
   At least, we should start *trying* to get IPv6 service from hotels.
   We may have a very hard time getting it, but the fact that customers
   are starting to *ask* for it will help make hotels aware of IPv6.
 
  I see no pointing in asking for something that a hotel agent is going
  to not be able to respond to.
 
  if you want a brown M  M's crontract you're going to actually have to
  work with an agent that can grok and then meet your requirements.
 
 [WEG]] Joel, I think this is a spurious line of logic. We already have 
 plenty of brown MMs requirements. We bring in our own internet access 
...
 professionally manage their guest internet services. If we ask, the 
 response is likely to be well, no one's ever asked for that before... 
 but that should be followed with ...but we'll find out...

+1 ... and asking will raise awareness of the issue.

Of course, as has been mentioned many times in other threads, we
negotiate meeting venues a long time in advance. There may even
be an IT support plan to add IPV6 before we arrive..
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Re: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

2011-10-20 Thread Alejandro Acosta
On Thu, Oct 20, 2011 at 2:29 PM, David Morris d...@xpasc.com wrote:


 On Thu, 20 Oct 2011, George, Wes wrote:

  From: Joel jaeggli [mailto:joe...@bogus.com]

   At least, we should start *trying* to get IPv6 service from hotels.
   We may have a very hard time getting it, but the fact that customers
   are starting to *ask* for it will help make hotels aware of IPv6.
 
  I see no pointing in asking for something that a hotel agent is going
  to not be able to respond to.
 
  if you want a brown M  M's crontract you're going to actually have to
  work with an agent that can grok and then meet your requirements.

 [WEG]] Joel, I think this is a spurious line of logic. We already have
 plenty of brown MMs requirements. We bring in our own internet access
 ...
 professionally manage their guest internet services. If we ask, the
 response is likely to be well, no one's ever asked for that before...
 but that should be followed with ...but we'll find out...

 +1 ... and asking will raise awareness of the issue.

+1  we always should try


 Of course, as has been mentioned many times in other threads, we
 negotiate meeting venues a long time in advance. There may even
 be an IT support plan to add IPV6 before we arrive..
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Re: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

2011-10-20 Thread Robinson Tryon
On Thu, Oct 20, 2011 at 2:59 PM, David Morris d...@xpasc.com wrote:
 Of course, as has been mentioned many times in other threads, we
 negotiate meeting venues a long time in advance. There may even
 be an IT support plan to add IPV6 before we arrive..

I think that it's great if they say they have a plan to add IPv6
support, but plans (especially about IPv6) seem to have a weird habit
of being delayed. It seems prudent to put it in the signed contract so
that there are no surprises from either the hotel/venue side or from
the conference organizers' side.

--R
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Re: IPv6 support in hotel contract?

2011-10-20 Thread Cullen Jennings

We just failed to manager to find a venue in Asia because there was no venue 
that meant all the constraints. I'd rather not add more constraints to the 
hotel selection. I love the taste of dog food, but v6 in the hotel is not 
something that I find critical to accomplish the task I come to IETF to get 
done. 


On Oct 20, 2011, at 7:01 AM, George, Wes wrote:

 My last message caused something else to occur to me – there has been a lot 
 of discussion both here and at NANOG about hotels being woefully 
 underprepared for the internet (and address) use that their guests generate 
 when a conference full of geeks and their multiple devices per person descend 
 upon them. Sometimes the IETF is successful at convincing the hotel to let 
 them take over the internet service in the guest rooms, sometimes not.
  
 Perhaps we can kill two birds with one stone by starting to require IPv6 
 service in the guest rooms when we enter into negotiations with hotels. If 
 they don’t have it, we’ll be happy to temporarily take over the internet 
 service, or assist them in getting it enabled permanently in their existing 
 network, and if neither of those options are acceptable, it provides 
 negotiating leverage on other things. This also has the net effect of 
 starting to make it clear to hotel management that IPv6 is going to start 
 being mandatory for some subset of their guests before too much longer.
  
 I realize that having something in the contract doesn’t mean that we’re any 
 more likely to get it. But the fact that it’s in the contract makes a 
 statement in and of itself. IAOC, any reason why this couldn’t be added, 
 especially given how far in advance you’re negotiating with venues?
  
 Thanks,
  
 Wes George
  
 
 This E-mail and any of its attachments may contain Time Warner Cable 
 proprietary information, which is privileged, confidential, or subject to 
 copyright belonging to Time Warner Cable. This E-mail is intended solely for 
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