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ORLANDO -- The future of communications calls for a focus on unified communications and collaboration, workforce mobility, IP telephony and network virtualization. But moving from IPv4 to IPv6? Don't worry about it yet, Gartner analysts say.
"Given all you have to invest in, IPv6 is far down the list," said David Willis, vice president in Gartner's communications group, who joined with Gartner vice president Bob Hafner to discuss the topic of the " Future of Communications" at the Gartner Symposium ITExpo 2009 , a five-day event attended by thousands of high-tech executives.
Although the shift from IPv4 to IPv6 has been mandated for the federal government due to the perception that IP address space is running out and IPv6 is an improved Internet communications protocol, Willis said the reality is that "the economies of moving to IPv6 aren't working out for people."
Network World's Essential Guide to IPv6
It's too expensive and in an economic recession, it has not been a priority, nor he felt, should it necessarily be outside those with special requirements, such as the government and the military. "IPv4 and IPv6 work very well together," Willis pointed out, alluding to shared routing strategies and gateways.
However, the American Registry for Internet Numbers has said that U.S. ISPs are requesting more IPv6 addresses and fewer IPv4 ones than ever.
On the topic of money, Hafner noted that the economic recession has contributed to the effect of lowering prices during the
last year for many types of telecom products and services.
"Network costs continue to drop," Hafner said to the audience. The costs for switches, LANs and IP telephony gear can be found
at over 50% less than previous years, and "by 2012, the price for enterprise-class gigabit Ethernet ports will decline by
at least 40% from 2009."
Overall, telecom services are expected to decline, too. "Through 2013, enterprise bandwidth pricing will decline at an average rate of 8% to 12% per year, " Hafner said.
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Comments (7)
Don't listen to this fool.By Anonymous on October 20, 2009, 11:58 amI can't believe how foolish this is, now is the best time to invest, before crunch time. I always though we needed to try and use newer better technologies. Not...
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Bloody HellBy Anonymous on October 20, 2009, 1:53 pmPrepare yourselves, my poor, dear, long-suffering Internet users: carrier NAT coming to an ISP near to you. Businesses who listen to this analyst, and who are sympathetic...
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Talk to SPBy Anonymous on October 20, 2009, 2:39 pmStart Dual stack planning and testing now so that deployment can start around 2012 TO DELIVER feature parity with IPv4.
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Shoud be fired for such stupid advice...By Anonymous on October 20, 2009, 5:09 pmI've put all the sane reasons to _start_ investing and migrating on my blog. Unfortunately, David Willis will not be able to read it, as it is on one of my many...
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The kingdom looks fine from the Ivory TowerBy ipv6commando on October 26, 2009, 9:13 amOnce again, the "analysts", bloated with wisdom garnered at the all-day feast with their fellow analysts, have absolutely no idea that the rest of the kingdom is...
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Don't seem to have a clue...By Anonymous on October 28, 2009, 5:54 pmThe biggest problem is how to manage IPv4 and IPv6 co-existence, and Gartner publishes: "IPv4 and IPv6 work very well together". They should have talked to people...
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