[members-discuss] IPV4 Addresses
- Previous message (by thread): [members-discuss] IPV4 Addresses
- Next message (by thread): [members-discuss] IPV4 Addresses
Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
Dominik Nowacki
dominik at clouvider.co.uk
Fri May 27 12:41:01 CEST 2016
Please Please look at the working group email discussion archive before starting this endless discussion again. Kind Regards, Dom uk.clouvider -----Original Message----- From: members-discuss [mailto:members-discuss-bounces at ripe.net] On Behalf Of Host.AG Sent: 27 May 2016 11:08 To: members-discuss at ripe.net Subject: Re: [members-discuss] IPV4 Addresses Hi I'm rather new here and i don't know the past discussions. Wouldn't it be better to force ipv6 adoption? I think that's the only way to solve the problems with ipv4, from it's high price to it's scarcity and inequality. Best Regards, Bogdan Ionescu https://www.host.ag On 5/27/2016 12:50 PM, Host Master wrote: > There's certainly been a lot of talk about IPv4, and it running out > and has been for a very long time, and how it's turned into a black > market with people selling IP's at ridiculous figures. We're all up > in arms about that but to be honest, it's up to us to correct this situation. > How do we do this? By adopting IPv6 more widely and more quickly. > IPv6 is 20 years old this year, yet according to Google, only 10-11% > of its visitors use IPv6. This is appalling. At my company, we've > implemented > IPv6 as a dual-stack solution. Every new customer we add gets IPv6 > whether they ask for it or not. We also have a project to IPv6-ise > all our existing customers, because I feel it's really important to > adopt > IPv6 to avoid all these IPv4 complications and issues. > > > > IPv6 is easy people, don't be afraid of it. Put it on all your > servers. Make your websites support it. We, as network > administrators, have a responsibility to the world to lead by example > and utilize IPv6 to its fullest. It's not going to resolve the IPv4 > issues that we have today, but the more we do, the closer we get > ourselves to a final solution - no more IPv4. > > > > Nowadays, when I talk to customers, or even other technical people, I > refer to IP - and legacy IP. We all need to have the same mind-set. > > > > Best Regards > > Netscenario > > > > *Lester Clayton* > > Technical Manager > > *Netscenario AS* > > > > Fridtjof Nansens Gate 19C > > 3722 Skien > > Norway > > Mobile: +47 35 12 29 68 > > E-mail: lester at netscenario.no <mailto://lester@netscenario.no> > > *www.netscenario.no* <http://www.netscenario.no/> > > > > > > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > -- e-posten er kontrollert for virus på vegne av Netscenario, med > sikkerhet fra Comendo! > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > -- > > > ---- > If you don't want to receive emails from the RIPE NCC members-discuss > mailing list, please log in to your LIR Portal account and go to the general page: > https://lirportal.ripe.net/general/ > > Click on "Edit my LIR details", under "Subscribed Mailing Lists". From here, you can add or remove addresses. > ---- If you don't want to receive emails from the RIPE NCC members-discuss mailing list, please log in to your LIR Portal account and go to the general page: https://lirportal.ripe.net/general/ Click on "Edit my LIR details", under "Subscribed Mailing Lists". From here, you can add or remove addresses.
- Previous message (by thread): [members-discuss] IPV4 Addresses
- Next message (by thread): [members-discuss] IPV4 Addresses
Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]