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| Home > IPv4 or IPv6 -- Myths and Realities | |
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Are we really running out of IPv4 addresses? Does IPv6 improve routing, and does it support multihomed sites? Does IPv6 provide increased mobility or security? Find out the answers to all your IPv6 questions in this chapter, "IPv4 or IPv6 -- Myths and Realities," from Global IPv6 Strategies: From Business Analysis to Operational Planning by Patrick Grossetete, Ciprian P. Popoviciu and Fred Wettling. Learn how IPv6 was developed, why it is named IPv6, and the impact on the IP address space of mobile and consumer devices and increased wireless connectivity. This chapter debunks common IPv6 myths and reiterates its true strengths to help you make the right IPv6 migration decisions for your enterprise.
The year is 1977. Earth's population has not yet reached 4.5 billion. One hundred and eleven interconnected computing machines make up the ARPANET, a research network. Thirty years later, in 2008, Earth's population peaks at 6.6 billion and the Internet, with a population of 1.3 billion, has yet to reach 22 percent penetration rate, the threshold that qualifies it as a massively adopted technology. While arguing about the lifetime scope of the available IPv4 address space, the Internet community aggressively pursues a massive convergence of communication technologies (audio, data, video, and voice) over IP. The community is still debating the urgency of an upgrade to IPv6. In the year 2030, Earth's population is expected to be over 8 billion, adding nearly 75 million people every year, or twice the population of the state of California. The Internet is an integral part of the worldwide economy and everybody's life. The old IPv4 versus IPv6 debate is now history.
The Business Case for IPv6 So is an Internet upgrade necessary to sustain the growth of the future and to interconnect all the devices of the new global economy? Will IPv6 provide the fire to fuel the growth? Before debating the pros and cons of the new IP version, let's look at the historical perspective of IPv6 and its development.
About the book: The authors offer practical scenarios, proven best practices, and real-world case studies drawn from their unsurpassed experience helping enterprises and service providers move to IPv6. Writing for non-technical decision makers, they systematically review the costs, benefits, impacts and opportunities associated with IPv6 migration. Their insights and strategies can help you address both the technical side of IPv6 and the rarely discussed organizational issues that can make or break your transition.
About the authors: Ciprian P. Popoviciu, PhD, CCIE No. 4499, technical leader at Cisco, focuses on architecting, designing, and testing large IPv6 network deployments for service providers and enterprises worldwide. Grossetete and Popoviciu co-authored Deploying IPv6 Networks (Cisco Press). Fred Wettling manages architecture and strategic planning for Bechtel. Wettling is a member of the IEEE, North American IPv6 Task Force, and IPv6 Forum; directs the IPv6 Business Council; chaired the Network Applications Consortium (NAC); and served on the President's National Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee Next Generation Network Task Force.
Excerpted from Global IPv6 Strategies: From Business Analysis to Operational Planning by Patrick Grossetete, Ciprian P. Popoviciu and Fred Wettling (IBSN: 1587053438). Copyright © 2008, Cisco Press. All rights reserved.
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