rsk wrote:
Wild guess: When it actually becomes necessary, and not just a fad?
That's one way of looking at it. But I'd rather get it working on my linodes sooner, before it becomes "actually necessary," so that I have that headache out of the way.
If a hurricane is coming, and I can get the plywood to board up my house a day before the storm hits, I'd much rather do that than getting pelted by debris as I hammer away while the storm is already hitting.
This article gives some pretty realistic time frames for when we'll begin to see *real* problems:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news ... ns-dry.arsQuote:
(You will be able to take away my IPv4 address only by prying it away from my cold, dead fingers...)
Don't worry, no one is
trying to take your precious IPv4 address away from you. Having IPv6 up and running doesn't mean you have to say goodbye to v4. Modern OSes have been capable of running dual stacks for a long time now. So you can have your IPv4 address as long as it's there,
and an IPv6 address.
Or not. If you don't ever, ever, ever want your Linode to even know what IPv6 is, then you can do that too. Others' pro-activeness will not affect your refusal to know or care about this.
In fact, dual-stack will probably be the reality for a long, long time.