| Let's take a look at the Internet itself. https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc791.txt is dated 1981. Figure 1 in http://www.census.gov/prod/2013pubs/p20-569.pdf shows that the first time they recorded was in 1997, at 18%. That's 16 years (actually a bit more because my understanding is rfc791 documents the running code), and still under 20% - so by the same metric, the Internet is a failure! Of course, then we can see the tail of the S-curve: it's doubled in the next three years, then slowed down and the last measurement is 71% of households in 2011. 30% of US households don't have internet at all, in 2011. Now, let's bring the world-wide IPv6 numbers from the past 6 years, numbers from https://www.google.com/intl/en/ipv6/statistics.html#tab=ipv6...: 0.05% on 7 September 2008
0.09% on 31 August 2009
0.15% on 30 August 2010
0.34% on 1 September 2011
0.74% on 30 August 2012
1.84% on 1 September 2013
4.42% on 31 August 2014
The US figures from http://6lab.cisco.com/stats/cible.php?country=US (available since 2012): 1.32% on 1 September 2012
4.03% on 1 September 2013
9.91% on 1 September 2014
You can see it's been approximately doubling every year - and in the case of US more than doubling.Understandingly, everything starts from zero or a very small number.
A double of a very very small number is still a very small number. But if you keep doubling, at some point the numbers stop being small. We're at that point now. I hope these numbers speak by itself - those who ignore them, are welcome to continue doing so. They make an easier competition for those who don't. |
The first was a radically new technology and it took years for people to figure out how to best make use of it.
IPv6 was supposed to be a purely technical improvement to deal with some deficiencies of IPv4, notably address space limitations. It should mostly concern only network and systems administrators and systems software developers and be largely transparent to end users.
It's interesting that the two seem to have similar growth curves, but given the very different audiences involved I'm not sure what to make of that observation.
Certainly if you asked knowledgeable people in 1996 how long it would take to achieve near 100% IPv6 adoption I doubt many would have predicted 20 years.
On the other hand in 1981 I suspect few would have predicted that a technology developed by DARPA would be used by people in 2000 to buy books and manage their bank accounts.