Change the NAT configuration by following these steps. Make sure to adjust settings carefully.
Change the NAT configuration by following these steps. Make sure to adjust settings carefully.
That’s a bit confusing. Consumer devices have actually backed IPv6 for quite some time. My SB6141 is quite old—purchased before Motorola went out of business—and it does support IPv6. Windows has been supporting IPv6 since Windows 2000. The reality is that hardware exists. Otherwise, Comcast would not have rolled out IPv6. They’ve had it for a long time, and about 70% of their network traffic is expected to be IPv6.
It is. A huge portion of our network has IPv6 up until the access platform but are stuck until Calix finally updates their software. The other portion of our network that utilized Cisco/Juniper is all dual stack. Some of our chassis are going to need complete swaps. A chassis that cost $30,000 for the housing alone, $20,000 per blade and $50,000 for licencing per year for each blade. These are 12 blade chassis for NGPON. Just because the current hardware doesnt support it....hardware we bought in 2016... The data is just a terrible interpretation. Yes, 70% of traffic in Comcast, 52-4% globally is all IPv6. The problem is these numbers are based off of bandwidth. This all comes from two major (more upcoming) sources. Google and Netflix. Typical web traffic just gets shadowed when you look at these reports. When you spread it out to destination addresses, IPv6 essentially falls off the chart. IPv4 still is needed for a huge portion of traffic.
Your overall approach and the way you refer to others is what I label as a completely unreliable ISP. I don’t trust any of what you say about being overly biased or involved, nor do I think your understanding is as strong as you claim. IPv6 presents challenges and will likely keep doing so. I once had a single IPv6 connection, and it was essentially useless.
The attitude refers to individuals spreading false information while lacking real understanding of networking. It’s clear they don’t grasp the basics, as shown by their confusion about IPv6 and the internet. It’s odd to see how common IPv6 is, yet they still rely on NAT64 for connectivity.