What's going on with the preparations to turn off IPv4 at IETF-71? It's been really quiet surrounding that topic since the initial discussion. Because I've had an IPv6 mail server for years and a WWW proxy that allows IPv6-only hosts to get access to the IPv4 web is fairly trivial to set up (tip for XP users: XP can't do DNS lookups over IPv6, use Firefox and configure it with the IPv6 address of the proxy), my preperation for this has been mostly getting Jabber to work over IPv6. A while ago I managed to find a public Jabber server that is reachable over IPv6 (amessage.de with some other domains pointing to the same server). Unfortunately, the client I generally use, Apple's iChat, does support Jabber over IPv6 when there is IPv4 connectivity, but when the system has no IPv4 address it says that "you're not connected to the internet" and doesn't try to connect over IPv6. Recently I thought this was fixed but it turned out that the Parallels Desktop virtualization enviroment sets up a bunch of virtual interfaces with private addresses, which is enough for iChat to work over IPv6. Anyway, I started looking for Jabber clients that support IPv6. Most don't, but there are so many Jabber clients that there is actually a choice of ones that do. Unfortunately, none of them could connect to the jabber.ietf.org rooms. I first thought this was because of the clients, so I didn't keep a list of clients that support IPv6. But it turned out that this is a problem with my iljitsch at amessage.nl account on the amessage.de server, which doesn't seem IPv6-related. So... does anyone know a place to obtain a Jabber account that's usable over IPv6? I assumed psg.com would be a good candidate, but even though psg.com has a AAAA record, jabber.psg.com doesn't. _______________________________________________ IETF mailing list IETF@xxxxxxxx https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf