[ipv6-tf] IPv6 Launch Day, czyli zaraz sie zacznie...

Sam Russell sam.russell w reannz.co.nz
Wto, 17 Sty 2012, 20:09:58 CET


Brzmi, fajnie, czy PCSS ma plany dla IPv6?

2012/1/18 Bartek Gajda <gajda w man.poznan.pl>

>  I stalo sie.
>
> "the future is forever", czyli stary IPv6 ma zagoscic na dobre...
>
> Major Internet service providers (ISPs), home networking equipment
> manufacturers, and web companies around the world are coming together to
> permanently enable IPv6 for their products and services by 6 June 2012.
> http://www.worldipv6launch.org/
>
> pozdrawiam,
> Bartek
>
> -------- Original Message --------  Subject: [ipv6-wg] IPv6 Launch Day  Date:
> Tue, 17 Jan 2012 16:01:55 +0100  From: Marco Hogewoning
> <marcoh w marcoh.net> <marcoh w marcoh.net>  To: ipv6-wg w ripe.net
>
> The follow up on World IPv6 Day has just been announced.
>
> Marco
> http://www.worldipv6launch.org/press/20120117-2/
>
>
> World IPv6 Launch Solidifies Global Support for New Internet Protocol
>
> Top websites, Internet service providers, and home networking equipment
> manufacturers commit to largest transition in the Internet’s history
>
> [Washington, D.C., USA and Geneva, Switzerland] – 17 January 2012 –
> Major Internet service providers (ISPs), home networking equipment
> manufacturers, and web companies around the world are coming together to
> permanently enable IPv6 for their products and services by 6 June 2012.
>
> Organized by the Internet Society, and building on the successful
> one-day World IPv6 Day event held on 8 June 2011, World IPv6 Launch
> represents a major milestone in the global deployment of IPv6. As the
> successor to the current Internet Protocol, IPv4, IPv6 is critical to
> the Internet’s continued growth as a platform for innovation and
> economic development.
>
> “The fact that leading companies across several industries are making
> significant commitments to participate in World IPv6 Launch is yet
> another indication that IPv6 is no longer a lab experiment; it’s here
> and is an important next step in the Internet’s evolution,” commented
> Leslie Daigle, the Internet Society’s Chief Internet Technology Officer.
> “And, as there are more IPv6 services, it becomes increasingly important
> for companies to accelerate their own deployment plans.”
>
> ISPs participating in World IPv6 Launch will enable IPv6 for enough
> users so that at least 1% of their wireline residential subscribers who
> visit participating websites will do so using IPv6 by 6 June 2012. These
> ISPs have committed that IPv6 will be available automatically as the
> normal course of business for a significant portion of their
> subscribers. Committed ISPs are:
>
> ●      AT&T
> ●      Comcast
> ●      Free Telecom
> ●      Internode
> ●      KDDI
> ●      Time Warner Cable
> ●      XS4ALL
>
> Participating home networking equipment manufacturers will enable IPv6
> by default through the range of their home router products by 6 June
> 2012. Committed equipment manufacturers are:
>
> ●      Cisco
> ●      D-Link
>
> Web companies participating in World IPv6 Launch will enable IPv6 on
> their main websites permanently beginning 6 June 2012. Inaugural
> participants are:
>
> ●      Facebook (www.facebook.com)
> ●      Google (www.google.com)
> ●      Microsoft Bing (www.bing.com)
> ●      Yahoo! (www.yahoo.com)
>
> Content delivery network providers Akamai and Limelight will be enabling
> their customers to join this list of participating websites by enabling
> IPv6 throughout their infrastructure.
>
> As IPv4 addresses become increasingly scarce, every segment of the
> industry must act quickly to accelerate full IPv6 adoption or risk
> increased costs and limited functionality online for Internet users
> everywhere. World IPv6 Launch participants are leading the way in this
> effort.
>
> For more information about World IPv6 Launch, products, and services
> covered, as well as links to useful information for users and
> information about how other companies may participate, visit:
> http://www.worldipv6launch.org
>
> About the need for IPv6
> IPv4 has approximately four billion IP addresses (the sequence of
> numbers assigned to each Internet-connected device). The explosion in
> the number of people, devices, and web services on the Internet means
> that IPv4 is running out of space. IPv6, the next-generation Internet
> protocol which provides more than 340 trillion, trillion, trillion
> addresses, will connect the billions of people not connected today and
> will help ensure the Internet can continue its current growth rate
> indefinitely.
>
> About the Internet Society
> The Internet Society is the world’s trusted independent source of
> leadership for Internet policy, technology standards and future
> development. Based on its principled vision and substantial
> technological foundation, the Internet Society works with its members
> and Chapters around the world to promote the continued evolution and
> growth of the open Internet through dialog among companies, governments,
> and other organizations around the world. For more information, see:www.internetsociety.org
>
> Akamai Technologies, Inc.
> Jeff Young
>
> AT&T
> Jenny Bridges
>
> Cisco
> Marc Musgrove
>
> Comcast
> Jorge Alberni
>
> D-Link
> Denise Keddy
>
> Facebook
> Nisha Gulati
>
> Google Inc.
>
> Internet Society
> Wende Cover
>
> Internode
> John Harris
>
> Limelight Networks
>
> Microsoft Bing
> Bill Hankes
>
> Time Warner Cable
> Justin Venech
>
> Yahoo!
> Christina Scharrenberg
>
>
>
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>
>


-- 
Sam Russell

Network Operations
Research & Education Advanced Network NZ Ltd
ddi: +64 4 913 6365
mob: +64 21 750 819
fax: +64 4 916 0064

http://www.karen.net.nz
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