The difficulties of adopting the next-generation Internet standard so far have outweighed its advantages, but one key part of the computing industry is showing signs of beginning the IPv6 transition in earnest: Internet service providers.
A total of 32 percent of ISPs offer IPv6 services to business customers today, according to a new European Commission-funded survey, said John Curran, chief executive of American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN), one of the world's five nonprofit Internet registry organizations that collectively hand out Internet addresses and keep track of which numeric addresses are connected to which servers on the Internet.
That percentage, though, is increasing.
"Sixty percent intend to have services within a year. That's a huge step up," Curran said. "Within two years, it is 80 percent."
He's baffled what the remaining 20 percent of ISPs will do, given that the Internet is expected to run out of the current limited stock of IPv4 addresses in about that same time frame, making ISPs left behind the virtual equivalent of a home-building contractor with no empty lots left on the street. According to Internet service company Hurricane Electric, which monitors the IPv6 transition, there are about 203 million IPv4 addresses left, enough to last less than nine months.
I learned, early in my working life, that the 'powers-that-be' usually manage by reaction rather than by planning ahead. Their philosophy seems to be: "ignore a problem and maybe it'll go away".
World IPv6 day is June 8th, 2011. No problems are anticipated for you with this browser, at this location. [more info]
When a publisher offers both IPv4 and IPv6, your browser appears to be happy to take the IPv4 site without delay.
Connections to IPv6-only sites are timing out. Any web site that is IPv6 only, will appear to be down to you.
Your DNS server (possibly run by your ISP) appears to have no access to the IPv6 Internet, or is not configured to use it. This may in the future restrict your ability to reach IPv6-only sites. [more info]
Your readiness scores
10/10
for your IPv4 stability and readiness, when publishers offer both IPv4 and IPv6
0/10 for your IPv6 stability and readiness, when publishers are forced to go IPv6 only