Does your ISP support IPv6?
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Does your ISP support IPv6?
Boosts welcome.
@toroidalcore Depends on the ISP
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@toroidalcore Depends on the ISP
@linkachus17 Do you have more than one?
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@linkachus17 Do you have more than one?
@toroidalcore Used to be. But the one am currently using has IPv6. While the other doesn't
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Does your ISP support IPv6?
Boosts welcome.
@toroidalcore I get a /48 and I use different /64's for different parts of my network
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Does your ISP support IPv6?
Boosts welcome.
@toroidalcore Yes, but not by default or publicly advertised. We asked in the shop and got IPv6 enabled for us. Apparently for them it's available on an experimental request basis.
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Does your ISP support IPv6?
Boosts welcome.
@toroidalcore yes and they charge extra for it, *and* only on "business lines". Fuckers.
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@toroidalcore I get a /48 and I use different /64's for different parts of my network
@viccie30 Nice, I only get a /60, but it's better than nothing. I've heard of some ISPs only giving out one /64.
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@toroidalcore Yes, but not by default or publicly advertised. We asked in the shop and got IPv6 enabled for us. Apparently for them it's available on an experimental request basis.
@AliciaBytes Not great, but not terrible.
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@toroidalcore yes and they charge extra for it, *and* only on "business lines". Fuckers.
@dch That's too bad, I guess they consider it an 'enterprise' feature so it's gotta cost more...
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@viccie30 Nice, I only get a /60, but it's better than nothing. I've heard of some ISPs only giving out one /64.
@toroidalcore A /60 would probably work for me, I don't have that many subnets, but it gives me room to expand my network if necessary. And the /48 allows me to neatly map a /64 to each VLAN.
I have one fixed IPv4 address as well and if I pay extra I can get a /29 as well, but I don't need that (yet). -
@toroidalcore A /60 would probably work for me, I don't have that many subnets, but it gives me room to expand my network if necessary. And the /48 allows me to neatly map a /64 to each VLAN.
I have one fixed IPv4 address as well and if I pay extra I can get a /29 as well, but I don't need that (yet).@viccie30 I've got subnets, but not too many at the moment. The extras would be handy and I could probably find something for them eventually.
I haven't looked into getting extra IPv4 at my current ISP, but at least I do get one public one. I'm planning on switching to a fiber ISP and will give that up, but at least they also give out a /60. They' re a little cheaper, but I guess I could get a public IPv4 from them and pay about what I pay now.
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Does your ISP support IPv6?
Boosts welcome.
@toroidalcore yes, but I have more latency with IPv6 :)))) (about 9ms to 20ms compared) and so they are very much lax about it.
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@toroidalcore yes, but I have more latency with IPv6 :)))) (about 9ms to 20ms compared) and so they are very much lax about it.
@itsozgur Interesting.
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Does your ISP support IPv6?
Boosts welcome.
@toroidalcore yes, but I purposely signed up to them because they are one of the few in my country that do.
Even so, i had to ask them to enable it -
Does your ISP support IPv6?
Boosts welcome.
@toroidalcore Yes and no
Telefónica España supports IPv6 only on mobile network, it seems that in households they’re having problems to offer it
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@toroidalcore Yes and no
Telefónica España supports IPv6 only on mobile network, it seems that in households they’re having problems to offer it
@amrtf It seems like mobile providers were a little quicker to catch on with IPv6. I think Verizon here had it on mobile before residential.
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Does your ISP support IPv6?
Boosts welcome.
@toroidalcore neither of these two options! it clearly has IPv6 websites but the tech support people lie to my face that they don't have it -
Does your ISP support IPv6?
Boosts welcome.
@toroidalcore
isp in general? yes. With my museum tech internet? no. -
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