Re: ipv6 in network-manager
Interesting information and I appreciate your detail. I suspect "tunneling" was the wrong word to use. What I meant was: My modem connects to the internet - not my pc's. My PC's are connected to a switch that is then connected to the modem via it's built in router. As long as my ISP provides software at the modem/router level to handle the translation, most of the change over will be transparent to me. Just as is the current way the modem receives and transmits using an IP address that I am virtually unaware of. This is an opinion/guess - not an educated analysis! . The part I'm must be missing is in the current setup - the actual packets arriving and sending are not being translated - just redirected. In the IPv6 to IPv4 world translation will be required. My guess is they'll have to do provide some sort of translation ability like this for quite awhile. Otherwise, the number of devices rendered unusable is staggering - like DVR's and streaming Netflix boxes and the like.
I am unclear on one part: Your market analysis.
I haven't paid a single dime directly for a router or modem that came from an ISP in almost two decades. I'm unsure as to why you think the change over to IPv6 will all of a sudden change the market competition for Internet access. ISP's in my area figured out long ago that there was competition in the market and offering free installation and equipment was the best way to attract new customers.
With this method, they are able to get you to sign a long (1-2 years) contract and I'm sure that a very large percentage of consumers don't regularly shop around for a new ISP unless they move. Who wants a new email address every year and to have to wait for the installer to show up?
In fact - in my area - the last change my ISP (Verizon) made was to offer free equipment, free fiber optic run to my house, bundle my telephone and tv service, more than triple my internet access speed (actually upload went up by 10x) and my total monthly cost went down by $60 and they threw in an HP Netbook for free. They're hoping I'll stay after the contract expires at a slightly higher monthly cost and I'm hoping they don't raise it too much so I don't have to shop around again.
Actually, I doubt that the equipment installed for this change over (about 18 months ago) will need more than a software upgrade from them to switch to IPv6 and may in fact have been part of the reason for the available upgrade.
This just seems counter-intuitive to me. You could just as easily say "What provider will survive in this economy if they try to charge us massive fee increases on top of forcing us to pay for new hardware?" The current economic state (or the current perception of it) may in fact have the opposite effect from what you're proposing. Much in the same way the home buyers are buying only the best deals at rock bottom prices. No one is out upgrading their lifestyle these days. At least in my area; I doubt they'll be much if any cost to me and my neighbors or we'll all start using Starbucks and the connection at work until someone comes in with a better offer.
It will be interesting to watch this change-over and see how it goes.
Interesting information and I appreciate your detail. I suspect "tunneling" was the wrong word to use. What I meant was: My modem connects to the internet - not my pc's. My PC's are connected to a switch that is then connected to the modem via it's built in router. As long as my ISP provides software at the modem/router level to handle the translation, most of the change over will be transparent to me. Just as is the current way the modem receives and transmits using an IP address that I am virtually unaware of. This is an opinion/guess - not an educated analysis! . The part I'm must be missing is in the current setup - the actual packets arriving and sending are not being translated - just redirected. In the IPv6 to IPv4 world translation will be required. My guess is they'll have to do provide some sort of translation ability like this for quite awhile. Otherwise, the number of devices rendered unusable is staggering - like DVR's and streaming Netflix boxes and the like.
I am unclear on one part: Your market analysis.
I haven't paid a single dime directly for a router or modem that came from an ISP in almost two decades. I'm unsure as to why you think the change over to IPv6 will all of a sudden change the market competition for Internet access. ISP's in my area figured out long ago that there was competition in the market and offering free installation and equipment was the best way to attract new customers.
With this method, they are able to get you to sign a long (1-2 years) contract and I'm sure that a very large percentage of consumers don't regularly shop around for a new ISP unless they move. Who wants a new email address every year and to have to wait for the installer to show up?
In fact - in my area - the last change my ISP (Verizon) made was to offer free equipment, free fiber optic run to my house, bundle my telephone and tv service, more than triple my internet access speed (actually upload went up by 10x) and my total monthly cost went down by $60 and they threw in an HP Netbook for free. They're hoping I'll stay after the contract expires at a slightly higher monthly cost and I'm hoping they don't raise it too much so I don't have to shop around again.
Actually, I doubt that the equipment installed for this change over (about 18 months ago) will need more than a software upgrade from them to switch to IPv6 and may in fact have been part of the reason for the available upgrade.
There's the rub. Who is going to make the firmware (wireless or modem mfgr) and how much will they sell it for, and in today's economy who can afford to pay the ransom prices you and I both know they will charge?
It will be interesting to watch this change-over and see how it goes.
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