Comment by orangeboats
5 days ago
>IPv6 ... still hasn't taken over the world [after thirty years of deployment]." is a very different statement than "IPv6 has failed.".
It's incredibly likely that the GP was referring to comments in this thread, which were indeed claiming that IPv6 has failed, despite the fact that its deployment has been steadily climbing up worldwide.
By the way...
>In the future, SOHO/home LANs can run servers on IPv6
The future is now. My web server is IPv6 only precisely due to the same reason you mentioned: my ISP has put me under a CGNAT. People can still connect to my website through the Cloudflare reverse proxy though (which I have only enabled for IPv4, IPv6 users get to enjoy direct connection).
> The future is now.
One part of it is for some-to-many folks, yes, and the third is here for a distressingly large number of people (without the solid support of the second part). Do note that the future I outlined has three parts. ;)