July 8, 2013 archive

Comcast Now Enabling Users To Easily Find Out IPv6 Status In Their Area

Are you a Comcast customer wondering when you will ever get IPv6?  If so, we learned by way of a tweet over the weekend that Comcast has now made it easy for customers to know if they have IPv6 or will soon be getting it.  If you are a Comcast customer, you simply need to go to www.comcast6.net where you will see at the top of the page the current status in your region.  Here is a screen shot from one of our team members who is a Comcast customer:

Comcast IPv6 ready

As shown in Comcast’s blog post, if both your regional “CMTS” and your cable modem support IPv6 you will see that you are now using IPv6.  If your CMTS (the equipment on Comcast’s network to which your home cable modem connects) supports IPv6 but your cable modem does not, you will see the message above that our team member saw.  There is also, of course, a message saying that IPv6 is not yet available in your area.

It’s great to see Comcast making this kind of on-demand checking available for customers and we look forward to day when it is no longer necessary as IPv6 will be fully deployed. Congrats to the Comcast IPv6 team for rolling out this tool!

TDYR #020 – Are You Planning For The Longevity Of Your URLs?

When you use a URL in a marketing campaign or for an event or other short-time occurrence, are you planning for the longevity of those URLs? Are you planning to keep it around after the event or campaign is over?

FIR #711 – 7/8/13 – For Immediate Release

Speakers and Speeches is up; Brian Solis speaking in London, FIR episodes will result; Quick News: Journalists trust elected officials more than PR people, Yellow Pages of social networks released, TSA Instagram account shows confiscated dangerous items, BBC issues news style guide; Ragan promo; News That Fits: is the CCO an endangered species?, Dan York's report, is the bloom off the social media rose?, Media Monitoring Minute from CustomScoop, listener comments, Twitter shows the way forward with Do Not Track, Michael Netzley's Asia report, employers are making bad decisions when screen candidates on Facebook; music from Jann Klose; and more.