Meanwhile no ISP whatsoever in Italy has deployed IPv6 in any form or shape. We still get a dynamic publicly routable IPv4 on landline based connections, but that's it.
The ex-monopolist, Tim, has shown it's plans for IPv6 rollout almost ten years ago using DS-Lite, to no avail. It lingered around as a little known feature you can opt in if you are still stuck with an ADSL connection (it's not supported neither with VDSL, nor FTTH), that introduces an enormous amount of lag to IPv4 connections and it's arcane to set up.
Not even university campuses have IPv6, because most network administrators either do not care about it or do not know how to set it up. It sucks, and it's sadly the standard reaction this country has towards any new technology; everybody just tries to ignore new developments to delay training and setup costs, until it gets too late and inevitable to avoid, leading to rushed up deployments, skyrocketed costs and a general lack of awareness and knowledge about how it works or how it should be employed.
The ex-monopolist, Tim, has shown it's plans for IPv6 rollout almost ten years ago using DS-Lite, to no avail. It lingered around as a little known feature you can opt in if you are still stuck with an ADSL connection (it's not supported neither with VDSL, nor FTTH), that introduces an enormous amount of lag to IPv4 connections and it's arcane to set up.
Not even university campuses have IPv6, because most network administrators either do not care about it or do not know how to set it up. It sucks, and it's sadly the standard reaction this country has towards any new technology; everybody just tries to ignore new developments to delay training and setup costs, until it gets too late and inevitable to avoid, leading to rushed up deployments, skyrocketed costs and a general lack of awareness and knowledge about how it works or how it should be employed.