2013-03-05, 12:03 PM
Eos Wrote:No, it's entirely transparent on your ISP's side for the most part.
An easy sample site to see if you can use it is http://ipv6.google.com/
You'll fail to connect without IPv6 functionality, otherwise it's just a normal website experience.
Well then, I fail.
Things that confuse me:
Using http://test-ipv6.comcast.net/# gave me two separate scores,
10/10 Important Measure: Your IPv4 stability, when sites offer both IPv4 and IPv6
0/10 Long-Term: Your IPv6 readiness when sites go IPv6-only - NOT CRITICAL right now
And my initial 10/10 from regular test-ipv6.net remains the same. From what I can tell, this means I'm okay when 4 and 6 are both in use, but cannot access IPv6 alone?

