nanog mailing list archives

Re: IPv6 news


From: JORDI PALET MARTINEZ <jordi.palet () consulintel es>
Date: Thu, 13 Oct 2005 18:59:59 +0200


No, I actually meant IP version (IP as a protocol), but even if we pay for
the IP address (also in Spain, 12 Euros per month for a single static IPv4
address), we pay it because the services associated to it, not the IP
address itself, right ?

Regards,
Jordi




De: "Edward W. Ray" <eray () netsecdesign com>
Organización: NetSec Design & Consulting, Inc.
Responder a: <eray () netsecdesign com>
Fecha: Thu, 13 Oct 2005 09:45:43 -0700
Para: <jordi.palet () consulintel es>, <nanog () merit edu>
Asunto: RE: IPv6 news

 "Consumers don't pay for IP at all"

If you are referring to IP addresses, I pay $50/month for my Class C space,
which I use from home to run my (small) company servers.

If you want a static IP from any ISP, they usually charge for it.



Edward W. Ray
CISSP, MCSE 2003+Security, P.E., SANS GCIA Gold, SANS GCIH Gold
President
NetSec Design & Consulting
(714) 997-9226 
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-nanog () merit edu [mailto:owner-nanog () merit edu] On Behalf Of
JORDI PALET MARTINEZ
Sent: Thursday, October 13, 2005 12:21 AM
To: nanog () merit edu
Subject: Re: IPv6 news


I don't think people upgrade anymore to 98, but at least to XP (if they do
now, at the end of next year will be doing to Vista).

I don't think either all the corporations take so long as 2 years to
upgrade.

Of course, I don't have concrete logs to show on anything of this, but is
not marketing just personal view based on experience with customers ;-) By
the way, if we start requiring logs for any comment that we do in this list,
then it may happen that the list is not so useful.

I disagree also that IPv6 is painful for the consumer, on the other way
around. Today they need to look into manuals for configuring STBs and other
devices. Most of the time this cost a lot of troubleshooting and support to
vendors and ISPs, which I know is not worth for even if charged to the
customer.

Consumers don't pay for IP at all, but for having things easier (not reading
manuals, not needing to configure tech stuff), having more services and
apps. Having more services and apps running into our networks will mean more
revenue, depending on your business model (such as more free and PAY TV
channels in a sat dish), and possibly because the increase in BW demand.

I also see much more customers interest in IPv6 outside of NA, but may be my
wrong perception, and not talking about academia.

Regards,
Jordi




De: Sean Figgins <sean () labrats us>
Responder a: <owner-nanog () merit edu>
Fecha: Wed, 12 Oct 2005 21:56:27 -0600 (MDT)
Para: "nanog () merit edu" <nanog () merit edu>
Asunto: Re: IPv6 news


On Thu, 13 Oct 2005, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ wrote:

And in 6-12 months the new Vista will start replacing XP,

Will start replacing XP on new consumer-grade computers.  Corporations
will take another 2-4 years to switch, and other people might have
upgraded to windows 98 from 3.11 by then.

I think that we need to buy as much time as possible for IP, as V6 is
going to be extremely painful for the consumer, and thus the consumer
is not going to want to adopt it.

Our jobs, as network designers and operators will be make it seemless
to the consumer without forcing them to shell out a thousand or more
dollars on new Windows software, and the hardware that will be
required to run it on.  If that is devising some sort of NAT for the
large percentage of customers that don't care, then that may be the
direction we need to take.

I have thought for a long time that which v6 is a worthy academic
persuit, customers are hardly interested in it when what they have now
works.

 -Sean




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The IPv6 Portal: http://www.ipv6tf.org

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Information available at:
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************************************
The IPv6 Portal: http://www.ipv6tf.org

Barcelona 2005 Global IPv6 Summit
Information available at:
http://www.ipv6-es.com

This electronic message contains information which may be privileged or confidential. The information is intended to be 
for the use of the individual(s) named above. If you are not the intended recipient be aware that any disclosure, 
copying, distribution or use of the contents of this information, including attached files, is prohibited.




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