http://test-ipv6.com/
Been playing with dual stacking SP for eventual conversion and so far my findings are that almost none of you will be able to use the IPV6 version.
Prove me wrong?
http://test-ipv6.com/
Been playing with dual stacking SP for eventual conversion and so far my findings are that almost none of you will be able to use the IPV6 version.
Prove me wrong?
Rip home depot public wifi. 0/10.on that
I'm not sure what option should I take on the poll.Your IPv4 address on the public Internet appears to be 187.187.72.48
No IPv6 address detected [more info]
Good news! Your current configuration will continue to work as web sites enable IPv6. [more info]
You appear to be able to browse the IPv4 Internet only. You will not be able to reach IPv6-only sites.
Your DNS server (possibly run by your ISP) appears to have no access to the IPv6 Internet, or is not configured to use it. This may in the future restrict your ability to reach IPv6-only sites. [more info]
says at the bottom what your readiness score is.
if thats not there, the "no ipv6 address" probably means 0/10, since...yeah. edit:I'm wrong, what's new!
Congratulations, I am not ready for IPV6 at present. Then again this would not be any different even if my ISP already had that option as I currently do not have one set.
0/10, can't even prove eos wrong by pressing a button.
On my work computer its 0/10. When I get home I'll try it as well but it seems to be a landslide atm lol
Comcast does not offer ipv6
After turning off ad-block, I went from 0/10 to 10/10, so people should be sure to do that. An IPv6 address is all I lack. (Which, I guess still proves Eos right?)
Spoiler
Spoiler
http://www.comcast6.net/
This doesn't measure whether or not you yourself have an IPV6 Address, but whether or not you can communicate with sites that do/are.Deployment Update
Published on Tuesday, October 23, 2012
IPv6 has been launched on all Arris DOCSIS 3.0 C4 CMTSes, covering over 50% our network. We are targeting completion of the rest of the network by mid-2013. Our progress has led to nearly 2.5% of our Xfinity Internet customers actively using native dual stack. Additionally, IPv6 traffic has increased 375% since World IPv6 Day in June 2011. Following World IPv6 Launch in June 2012 Comcast also observed that approximately 6% of the 2012 Olympics served over YouTube to Comcast customers was over IPv6.
You don't need to have an IPV6 address yourself to use IPV6 websites, so you would be one of the lucky few who apparently can.
I'm the only 10 so far? SHOWER ME WITH GOLD, BRAVE COMMANDER EOS. Or, you know... lemme know if my not-especially tech-savvy ass can help you with this plot of yours.
@Eos; I see. Well, in any case I know my ISP has not announced anything on IPv6 yet so I'll be waiting on the news. Would we have to make any kind of modifications in order to use it?
Edit: I forgot to mention that I turned off my ad blocker and it still shows up as 0/10 for me. Oh well.
No, it's entirely transparent on your ISP's side for the most part.
An easy sample site to see if you can use it is http://ipv6.google.com/
You'll fail to connect without IPv6 functionality, otherwise it's just a normal website experience.
It failed completely as expected. I'll just have to wait for development on it then.
Well then, I fail.
Things that confuse me:
Using http://test-ipv6.comcast.net/# gave me two separate scores,
10/10 Important Measure: Your IPv4 stability, when sites offer both IPv4 and IPv6
0/10 Long-Term: Your IPv6 readiness when sites go IPv6-only - NOT CRITICAL right now
And my initial 10/10 from regular test-ipv6.net remains the same. From what I can tell, this means I'm okay when 4 and 6 are both in use, but cannot access IPv6 alone?
I get the same result as you in this case. Unsure if FiOS supports IPv6 or not, a quick Google search leads to people asking, but no responses.
And nope, can't view http://ipv6.google.com
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