No business case for IPv6, survey finds
But Internet Society members report rising customer demand, deployment plans
By
Carolyn Duffy Marsan
,
Network World
, 03/20/2009
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Business incentives are completely lacking today for upgrading to IPv6, the next generation Internet protocol, according to
a survey of network operators conducted by the Internet Society (ISOC).
In a new report, ISOC says that ISPs, enterprises and network equipment vendors report that there are ``no concrete business drivers for
IPv6.’’
However, survey respondents said customer demand for IPv6 is on the rise and that they are planning or deploying IPv6 because
they feel it is the next major development in the evolution of the Internet.
ISOC released its survey on the same day that Google is sponsoring a two-day conference in Mountain View, Calif. for IPv6 implementers and a few days before it is hosting a panel on IPv6 adoption in San Francisco.
IPv6 is a long-anticipated upgrade to the Internet’s main communications protocol, which is known as IPv4. IPv6 was created
by the Internet Engineering Task Force, a standards body that receives funding from ISOC.
IPv6 is needed because the Internet is running out of IPv4 addresses. IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses and can support approximately 4.3 billion individually addressed devices on the Internet. IPv6,
on the other hand, uses 128-bit addresses and can support so many devices that only a mathematical expression -- 2 to the
128th power -- can quantify its size.
Experts predict IPv4 addresses will be gone by 2012. At that point, all ISPs, government agencies and corporations will need
to support IPv6 on their backbone networks. Today, only a handful of U.S. organizations – including the federal government and a few leading-edge companies like Bechtel – have deployed IPv6 across their networks.
All of the ISOC survey respondents said they are planning for IPv6, and most have begun deployment.
IPv6 deployment remains spotty, even for organizations committed to the technology, the survey found. When asked how they
were deploying IPv6, a little over half said they were deploying IPv6 on parts of their network rather than their whole network.
Several respondents said they envision parts of their networks never operating with IPv6.
The survey respondents didn’t indicate that they are worried about running out of IPv4 addresses. Only one of the survey respondents is closely tracking its IPv4 address usage, saying that it needs 130,000 new IPv4 addresses
every three years. Most of the respondents said they will increase their use of network address translation (NAT) technology
if they can’t get more IPv4 addresses.
What’s driving network operators to IPv6 is demand from customers rather than IPv4 address depletion, the survey found. Almost
half of the respondents report customer pressure to migrate to IPv6. Fewer respondents indicated a need for additional address
space or the desire for simpler addressing or less complexity on their networks.
More than half of the survey respondents said that additional address space is the primary motivator for IPv6. Network operators
put less weight on the auto-configuration, built-in security and mobility features that are found in IPv6.
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Comments (26)
Win 7 Direct AccessBy Anonymous on March 20, 2009, 3:56 pmMicrosoft Direct Access in Windows 7 will be the killer app to deploy IPv6. The money saved using Direct Access will be the business justification.
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When you look at small businesses, and home power users (like moBy Anonymous on March 20, 2009, 4:22 pmWhen you look at small businesses, and home power users (like most of your audience here) being mugged for spare change by dsl and cable companies for a live ip...
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Business case for IPv6: Stay in businessBy Anonymous on March 20, 2009, 6:02 pmDeploying IPv6 is about reducing business risk. When the IPv4 free pool is exhausted, network businesses cannot grow without IPv6. If you want to be in business...
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It's an Infrastructure IssueBy jdoyle on March 20, 2009, 6:44 pmSaying that there's no "business case" for IPv6 is a newer version of the long-asked question, "What is the 'IPv6 Killer App.'" There isn't one. IPv6 is an infrastructure...
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Terribly Misleading HeadlineBy jdoyle on March 20, 2009, 7:38 pmI encourage anyone who is interested to read the actual ISOC study cited. It does not at all say what the headline to this article would lead you to believe. The...
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MeatBy Anonymous on March 21, 2009, 11:19 amLet's put this in terms of meat. Something most people even non-geeks can understand. Case-ready meats are meats that packaged centrally in a very large meat processing...
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