Forum Moderators: phranque
Since the Internet began in the US, most of the current (IPv4) addresses are owned by US organizations and companies. In fact, Virginia Tech [vt.edu], an engineering college, owns most of the Class B addresses.
As the Internet expands into Asia, along with wireless technology, IPv6 will become more prevalent. There are hubs and routers for VPNs available today that can convert data travelling from IPv6 to IPv4 and vice-versa.
This is definitely a trend to watch, because some experts have been predicting an IP address shortage within the next 5 years or so. So make your servers compatible now! :)
Says Microsoft:
The IPv6 software supplied in this release contains prerelease code and is not intended for commercial use. This software is made available for research, development, and testing only and must never be used in a production environment. Microsoft is not responsible for your use of the code or for the results from your use of the code, and Microsoft does not provide any level of technical support for IPv6 in this release.
Backbone providers have no financial incentive to roll out IPv6. Until it becomes critical to do so, they won't.
Professor Dan Bernstein (author of qmail) has some thoughts published on why IPv6 isn't getting rolled out, and won't be rolled out anytime soon: [cr.yp.to...]
BTW - By IANA's and ARIN's latest published growth statistics, and the number of blocks still held in reserve, we'll realistically run out of space somewhere between 2015 and 2020.
[arin.net...]
SN