[AusNOG] IPv6 excuses
Robert Hudson
hudrob at gmail.com
Sat May 28 09:41:28 EST 2016
Early adopter status for IPv6 stopped being a thing many years ago. OSs,
vendors, standards, etc have all been ready for ages.
To claim otherwise would be like claiming people who adopted IPv4 before
CIDR or VLSM came into being were somehow disadvantaged for being "early
adopters", and those who stuck with protocols that existed before IPv4
until that point "reaped the rewards".
tl;dr: Stop making excuses.
On 28 May 2016 9:34 AM, "Mark Delany" <g2x at juliet.emu.st> wrote:
> There isn't a immediate return.
You could also argue that early adopters are paying a higher price as
they have to wrassle with equipment vendors, train staff, deal with
end-user issues such as old OS instances, deal with competing/evolving
standards/concepts around address management. And, in effect, incur
the cost of managing two networks instead of one.
The "Jonny-come-lately" crowd reap all the benefits of the early
mis-steps, are able to more easily acquire trained staff, are certain
that vendor kit is now well known to work in all cases, can jump onto
ausnog and get instant answers, can simply adopt BCPs that didn't
formerly exist, etc., etc.
>From a purely business perspective it is appealing to hold off until
the very last instant as each passing day makes the transition that
little bit easier thanks to the work of others.
Early adoption is hardly a competitive advantage and businesses are
generally not dumb. If a v4-only hosting company asks you to quantify
how much revenue it has lost thus far, what would your answer be?
Probaby less than zero methinks.
So they will jump, but they have to see an obvious competitive
advantage/disadvantage first.
Until then, us tech-types have to continue the struggle with our
bottom-up approach which is painful and slow.
Mark.
_______________________________________________
AusNOG mailing list
AusNOG at lists.ausnog.net
http://lists.ausnog.net/mailman/listinfo/ausnog
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.ausnog.net/pipermail/ausnog/attachments/20160528/913e7133/attachment.html>
More information about the AusNOG
mailing list