Hopefully most people will have realised by now that last Wednesday (8 June) was World IPv6 Day. The idea of this day was to enable IPv6 on various web sites, including some quite famous ones like Google and Facebook and Yahoo! and see what would happen.
Irritatingly, there were many press articles about World IPv6 Day were published which seemed to me to be still largely sceptical of the whole thing, or was dismissed as a pointless exercise. But really, the whole point of the day itself was basically to see what would happen when people enabled IPv6 on their servers. Perhaps The Register put it the best with their headline, even if the article itself wasn’t much good in my opinion —”World IPv6 Day fails to kill Internet”, as if that was some kind of surprise. (I knew it wouldn’t, but then again this web site has been IPv6 enabled for ages…)
But even if the press think or thought it was all one great big massive publicity stunt, what now? Because now, the day is over, and presumably we can all go back to sleep — but sadly we can’t, because IPv4 addresses are still running out. We can’t use NAT, or double NAT, or treble NAT forever. And it left me thinking about what should happen next, because the world after World IPv6 Day doesn’t seem much different to the world before World IPv6 Day. Maybe we should have another one next year…?
Thankfully, things do seem to be moving, but slowly. Two big UK ISPs have announced on their respective web sites that they either have plans to roll out v6 or are trialling it – O2/Be are hopefully going to have v6 available at the end of the year, and Plusnet are currently trialling now. And Billion now have a UK version of an IPv6 ADSL wireless router (albeit with beta firmware) also shipping.
I’m hoping that when O2/Be roll out their v6 implementation, being one of the larger UK ISPs, that this would entice the likes of BT Retail and TalkTalk to follow suit. Plusnet, although owned by BT, is not really big enough to be called a ‘big player’ in the market. It’s the old problem – the ISPs are claiming there’s no demand, and the service providers can’t roll it out because the ISPs aren’t offering it, which means they can’t create demand. Perhaps things won’t change until the companies that got the last APNIC allocations use their allocations up 9 months hence.
It’s all slightly depressing, isn’t it? :)