Qwest offers dedicated IPv6 addresses to government, business customers

By offering public and private IPv6 addresses, Qwest (NYSE: Q) is cashing in on the emerging opportunity to help enterprise and government agencies make their respective transitions from IPv4 to IPv6 addressing.

Current Qwest iQ networking service customers will be able to leverage the new IPv6 capabilities, including built-in security and its “near-endless” supply of IP addresses. Customers can run IPv4 and/or IPv6 addresses via either a dual stack or native IPv6 modes.

More from Fierce Telecom…

Q&A with Visual Online

Today we have a Q&A with Visual Online. Visual Online caught our attention when they released a press announcement in January 2010 stating that they have started with testing IPv6 on their ADSL connections. Time to ask them a few questions!


Please tell us a little about Visual Online

Visual Online is a company that started its business in Luxembourg in 1996, back in the old days of dial-up Internet access. Since then, it has followed all the evolutions Internet has experienced by adding several services to its portfolio. In 2000 it became a subsidiary of the government-owned Entreprise des Postes et Télécommunications in Luxembourg.
Today Visual Online is one of the most renowned Internet and Voice over IP service providers in Luxembourg with its own international redundant backbone and Colocation infrastructure, operating Tier Level 2 and Tier Level 4 Datacenters, and distributing it through its Colocation-Center platform.
Visual Online is also a Domain name registrar for most of TLDs through its Dns-Stock platform.
For more information on our services please visit our website.

When and how did IPv6 began to be a part of Visual Online
Our first experiments on IPv6 started right after the Task Force IPv6 Luxembourg Meeting that took place on November 8, 2002. In that meeting, the most important Internet players in Luxembourg were present. Soon after that, we received our first IPv6 allocation on October 27, 2003.
In the first years only internal testing were performed. Later, we started offering IPv6 DNS services over our DNS-Stock platform. In January 2010, after different tests, we started to provide native IPv6 (dual-stack) connections to our broadband customers, being the first ISP in Luxembourg for that kind of offering.

What is the current status of IPv6 at Visual Online?
- IPv6 DNS services
- Native DSL broadband connections (dual stack)
- Our dedicated server customers receive their IPv6 prefix for free, in addition to their standard IPv4 addressing

It is important to note that Visual Online is currently providing to most of its broadband customers with IPv6-ready CPEs such as the AVM Fritz!Box 7570 and AVM Fritz!Box 7270 models. All of these customers may turn in the near future to IPv6, so we make sure today that they are ready for that tomorrow.

In what way do you expect to see IPv6 growth in the next couple of years for Visual Online?
The market will decide at what speed IPv6 will adopted. If more devices or applications arrive that would like to take advantage of the multitude of IP addresses that IPv6 brings to each user, then the adoption will be faster. We can expect though that the big manufacturers will jump into the IPv6 bandwagon only when this will be widely adopted by the public.
Nevertheless, we feel that, as an ISP today, we have to be ready to answer to the IPv6 demand if required. We notice however that the IPv6 content is still very rare on the Internet which we think is a major problem for the IPv6 roll out.
The private users will probably wait until the last minute to switch to IPv6 perhaps until they will be pushed by their need for a new product, or by their ISP! For the professionals there is more concern for the IPv6 adoption and they will surely be the first to take advantage of IPv6 addressing.

Are there any things you would like to say about IPv6 in general?
IPv6 is the next generation of the Internet Protocol, and will dramatically expand the number of addresses available for web sites, as well as millions of mobile devices with Internet access. Soon many people will discover it on their everyday’s life. Who has never thought about a fridge connected to the net that can take online orders for you according to what is missing inside? IPv6 can bring a world in which every home appliance can perfectly use his own IP address! A world were IP addresses are not rare commodity anymore.


We would like to thank Francisco Malpica for taking the time to answer our questions. And we wish Visual Online the best of luck!

Francisco Malpica

IPv6 Basking in the Desert Sun

Tuesday June 29th at the Cisco Live Conference Las Vegas, John Chambers announced their newest product, the Cius tablet aimed at the enterprise market and positioned as a mobility product. That very same day a two hour IPv6 deployment panel, moderated by Cisco’s Alain Fiocco, featured Google, Microsoft, Comcast and Tata Communications in front of a room filled to near capacity.

The nature of the audience was interesting. Compared to previous years, when asked about their affiliation, the number of hands raised for the category ‘enterprise’ was significantly higher. ISP’s, Government and Education sector used to dominate but Industry now seems to have finally taken notice.

The session was prefaced by John Chambers’ video, the same one presented at the Google IPv6 Conference some weeks ago, announcing Cisco’s commitment to IPv6 support on all product lines. Top down works in most Corporations, so the various fiefs and divisions will certainly take notice as they will most likely be regularly probed on their progress. Let us assume that their bonuses will also be linked to some IPv6 related deliverables, this always brings quite some focus.

What remains of the increasingly putrid IPv4 address pool seems to dry up even faster under the scorching sun of the Vegas Valley. The exhaustion counters agree that a year from now the IANA pool will be dry while some pundits hypothesize a final run on the remaining IPv4 address blocks. Why not a betting site on the exact IPv4 exhaustion date? after all this is Vegas. Allocation of ever smaller blocks remains a temptation, ignoring the fact that associated table sizes would put possibly unbearable strain on routing and affect service quality. ‘Business continuity’ is becoming the new mantra for a more rapid adoption of IPv6. The perceived issues, not surprisingly are the lack of training and back-office readiness as already voiced at the Google Conference.

In the meantime the tier 1 networks are ready, the active IPv6 BGP table is now well over 3000 and shows a healthy growth, content is increasingly IPv6 accessible, operating systems are ready and IPv6 trickles down all the way to the eyeballs, in other words the end-user. Some end-user customers even switched to Comcast, just to be part of their IPv6 trial.

When I will see ‘IPv6 ready’ written on a Cisco Linksys box at Future Shop, I will buy one. I am also eagerly waiting for Videotron, my cable and internet provider, to follow in Comcast’s steps.

And by the way, we were told that Cius is Android based and IPv6 ready.

IPv6 is doing well under the desert sun and summer heat.

Written by Yves Poppe, Director, Business Development IP Strategy

RIPE updates the IPv6 Address Types Cheat Sheet


http://www.ripe.net/ipv6-address-types/

Source: @rfc3849 on Twitter

Poll result: Your solution for IPv6 usage

We have been running the poll for some time now and its time for the results.

In total 457 people voted on the poll:

197 people voted that we should just do it. That means that in every area that you could imagine, IPv6 support has to become common good. We do see more and more IPv6 support in all kinds of software and hardware products but this is only the beginning. With only a couple of years until you can not get any IPv4 more company’s should be aware that they will have to support IPv6, and they best start now so their products will be (IPv6-) ready when needed.

Don’t forget to vote on the new poll:  Would you pay extra for IPv6 support in hardware/software?

Graph over the endgame

People have asked me to provide a graph, similar to Hustons figure 30

Here is one http://www.ipv4depletion.com/endgame.png.

The main differences are are that I’m not providing any historical data. Everything you see is the predictions moving forward. This makes it possible for me to zoom in more.What you are seeing is a stretched out version of the bottom right corner of Huston’s graph, from the vertical red line to the end of the graph.

My graph ends when the first RIR gets depleted. The graphs will be updated daily automatically.

Source: http://ipv4depletion.com/