nanog mailing list archives

Pinging TELUS: Another Big day for IPv6 - 10% native penetration


From: Jacques Latour <jacques.latour () cira ca>
Date: Fri, 22 Jan 2016 16:51:59 +0000

Hi,
Can someone from Telus ping me off-list re:IPv6 deployment.
Jack

-----Original Message-----
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces () nanog org] On Behalf Of Jacques
Latour
Sent: January-04-16 11:45 AM
To: Jared Mauch; Ca By; nanog () nanog org
Subject: RE: Another Big day for IPv6 - 10% native penetration

Great news and even more impressive is that Canada is the fastest adopter
with ~8% IPv6 penetration, growing from almost 0.5% to 8% in 3 months!!!.
See http://stats.labs.apnic.net/ipv6/CA

Telus is making a big difference in Canada as the IPv6 adoption leader @
~45% IPv6 adoption.
http://stats.labs.apnic.net/ipv6/AS852?c=CA&g=&w=1&x=1

Hint, hint, subliminal message here for all Canadian ISPs, IPv6 works  ;-)

So let's shutdown IPv4 on April 4, 2024

Bonne Année!



-----Original Message-----
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces () nanog org] On Behalf Of Jared
Mauch
Sent: January-04-16 11:28 AM
To: Ca By
Cc: nanog () nanog org
Subject: Re: Another Big day for IPv6 - 10% native penetration


On Jan 4, 2016, at 11:09 AM, Ca By <cb.list6 () gmail com> wrote:

On Mon, Jan 4, 2016 at 3:26 AM, Neil Harris
<neil () tonal clara co uk>
wrote:

On 02/01/16 15:35, Tomas Podermanski wrote:

Hi,

    according to Google's statistics
(https://www.google.com/intl/en/ipv6/statistics.html) on 31st
December
2015 the IPv6 penetration reached 10% for the very first time.
Just a little reminder. On 20th Nov 2012 the number was 1%. In
December we also celebrated the 20th anniversary of IPv6
standardization - RFC
1883.

I'm wondering when we reach another significant milestone - 50%
:-)

Tomas
Given the recent doubling growth, and assuming this trend is
following a logistic function, then, rounding the numbers a bit for
neatness, I get:

Jan 2016: 10%
Jan 2017: 20%
Jan 2018: 33%
Jan 2019: 50%
Jan 2020: 67%
Jan 2021: 80%
Jan 2022: 90%

with IPv4 traffic then halving year by year from then on, and IPv4
switch-off (ie. traffic < 1%) around 2027.

Neil
Just a reminder, that 10% is a global number.

The number in the USA is 25% today in general, is 37% for mobile devices.

Furthermore, forecasting is a dark art that frequently simply
extends the past onto the future.  It does not account for
purposeful engineering design like the "world IPv6 launch" or iOS updates.

For example, once Apple cleanses the app store of IPv4 apps in 2016
as they have committed and pushes one of their ubiquitous iOS
updates, you may see substantial jumps over night in IPv6 eyeballs,
possibly meaningful moving that 37% number to over 50% in a few shorts
weeks.

This will squarely make it clear that IPv4 is minority legacy
protocol for all of mobile, and thusly the immediate future of the internet.

I for one welcome the iOS update that brings v6 APN native access to
my phone, or at least v4v6 APN setting.

I keep hearing rumors it is "coming soon".

This could have a similar step function in the traffic and graphs.


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