6Bone IPv6 Network Shutting Down Tomorrow
theberf writes "On June 6, 2006 the experimental IPv6 network, the 6bone, will be
shut down. All 3FFE:: addresses will revert to the IANA and should no
longer be used. All IPv6 traffic should now be using production IPv6
addresses delegated by Regional Internet Registries.
The 6Bone has been in operation for 10
years." Here's some more information about "IPv6 day."
After getting burned back in the late 80s / early 90s with the OSI protocol mandates, I'm leery of anything the US government mandates. Then again, look how well Ada turned out too.
I'm torn on the IPv6 situation. I hate the NAT issues we run into on every project that requires site to site connectivity (we're using 172.16/16.... Oh neat, so are we!) and the NAT hoops you have to jump through. But then again, it's hard to work with "network engineers" that get lost once you start moving off of octet boundries for netmasks.
If there was a decent ISP that provided both IPv4 and IPv6 connectivity with little to no overhead, I'd seriously start looking and doing pilot projects. Until that happens or the IPv6 killer app comes along, I don't see much movement from IPv4, which is a testament to the flexibilty and scaleability of the protocol stack. I really am in awe at what IPv4 has been able to do....