http://www.news.com/ICANN-turns-on-next-ge...-0-20&subj=news
The great migration from Internet Protocol version 4 to IPv6 has officially begun, after the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers added the first addresses to its root servers that conform to the new version.
On Monday, ICANN, which maintains the Internet's addressing systems, said it had for the first time added IPv6 addresses to the appropriate files and databases on six of the world's 13 root server networks--the systems containing the authoritative databases that form a master list of all top-level domain names. Before ICANN did this, those who were using IPv6 had no choice but to run it alongside IPv4, because the root server networks accommodated only IPv4.
"IPv6 will be an essential part (of) our future, and support in the root servers is essential to the growth, stability, and reliability of the public Internet," said the chairman of ICANN's Internet service and connectivity provider constituency, Tony Holmes. "The ISP community welcomes this development as part of the continuing evolution of the public Internet."
Almost all IP addresses currently use the fourth version of the protocol, IPv4, but the length of those addresses limits their number of permutations to around four billion. As more people become connected to the Internet and as more devices are manufactured that can themselves intelligently connect to the Internet, that number is rapidly becoming insufficient.
Businesses are now being urged to start migrating to the sixth version of the Internet protocol--IPv6. Because it uses a longer string of characters, this version makes it possible to have more than 340 trillion trillion trillion possible unique addresses. IPv6 has already been in use for a while in large corporations, where many employees need to be hooked up to a semiprivate network, but ICANN's latest move marks the start of the wider migration.
David Conrad, ICANN's vice president of research, said the addition of IPv6 addresses for the root servers "enhances the end-to-end connectivity for IPv6 networks, and furthers the growth of the global interoperable Internet."
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ICANN turns on IPv6
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ICANN turns on IPv6
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