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Khaled, I will anyway follow your advice and won’t waste my time anymore on this thread ;-) Yes, hoping a solution will come from anywhere to solve this issue. From: Eric Vyncke (evyncke) <evyncke@xxxxxxxxx>
IPv6 deployment takes indeed longer than most of us had hoped for... In several countries, more than half of the Internet users use IPv6 daily (less in enterprise deployment). ISPs in my country, Belgium, see between 30% to 40% of their traffic
being IPv6 (mainly to the big content providers). Khaled, I will anyway follow your advice and won’t waste my time anymore on this thread ;-) Regards and thank you for your interest in keeping the Internet up and running -éric From:
ietf <ietf-bounces@xxxxxxxx> on behalf of Khaled Omar <eng.khaled.omar@xxxxxxxxxxx> Ok, I think I got the answer for my question, don’t want to waste your time. Waiting and watching for a better solution to be applied practically. Khaled Omar
From: Erik Nygren <erik+ietf@xxxxxxxxxx>
It really is a composite story of individual ISPs, devices, and content. Some stats I published two years ago from the perspective of one CDN: https://blogs.akamai.com/2018/06/six-years-since-world-ipv6-launch-entering-the-majority-phases.html and things have grown since. For example, Akamai just peaked at 21 Tbps of global IPv6 traffic delivered: During a peak like that, some large countries and customers can see a majority of traffic being IPv6. You can see some of the wide variation between ISPs here: (There are also a few consumer electronics devices holding the numbers down in large residential networks.) Erik On Wed, Feb 19, 2020 at 12:35 PM Khaled Omar <eng.khaled.omar@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
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