If you RTFA you find that the 10.11% figure they are reporting is for hits Google has had from web browsers using IPv6. What's more, the article only compares a small number of countries. If you add Japan into the mix it pushes USA to 5th place.
If you look at some of the other charts, you can see that USA is top with the most IPv6 alive prefixes, announced prefixes, allocated prefixes and web servers.
So this is about household adoption of IPv6, not overall adoption. Without businesses providing services from servers via IPv6 the end user adoption would be pretty pointless.
Even the article points out that using another statistics gathering method, employed by Cisco, you get different results (still showing a similar ordering of adoption in different countries, but adoption percentages are completely different). So I'd be a bit wary of trusting the statistics here.
It is interesting to see from the charts that there's been a big push in Switzerland in the last month and how much ISPs pushing IPv6 can therefore help adoption... and that should be message to all the other ISPs out there, get on with pushing IPv6 to your customers.
Yes, I've seen one of the Philips sets a couple of years ago. It worked quite well and could be viewed from a variety of angles. You still get the 3D effect even if you're not in the sweet spots, however there is a tearing down the middle of the screen where two stereoscopic images get mixed up. Moving slightly (a few cm's) to one side fixes that though.
One problem I did find was that I started getting a headache after about 15 mins, I'm guessing this is to do with the images being a fixed focal length (the screen) while objects in the images appeared to be at different distances. Maybe it's something you'll just get used to if you keep watching.
The other problem with this sort of set is that it doesn't work for everyone. I know several people that could not see the 3D due to slight defects in their vision (e.g. slightly cross-eyed, lazy eye, etc.). Their vision defects were enough to stop the stereoscopic effect working.
Actually, I read it as an italicised '101' made from the 0's
The superior man understands what is right; the inferior man understands what will sell. -- Confucius