Mike Cummins, Technical Services Director at Logicalis, said: “IPv6 might sound like a techy issue, but failure to keep pace with other nations, be they trade partners or competitors, could ultimately have serious implications for competitiveness. Strategies such as the Internet of Things that are impacting the fundamental nature of how companies operate, are at risk of failure if management do not begin to address the changeover to IPv6.”
Designed to replace the IPv4 protocol already depleted in much of the world, IPv6 will allow the creation of a practically infinite number of public Internet addresses and the internet-enablement of a wide range of products and services such as mobile devices, internet connectivity in devices like cars, residential sensors and heart rate monitors, transportation systems, integrated telephony services, sensor networks, distributed computing, and online gaming. IPv6-readiness is also a requirement for companies looking to tap into growth opportunities in fast growing economies where IPv4 has already run out.
Cummins continues, “Because of the number of short-term resolutions that can stretch IPv4 pools, many organisations have been reluctant to take action. The time and effort required for the changeover, with what seems a distant threat, means IPv6 is a low priority. But how much are organisations willing to risk by waiting? We recommend IT departments audit their IPv4 estate to establish the time, resource and budget required to migrate to IPv6. In doing so, they can avoid a risky, last minute changeover and ensure a seamless transition.”
Logicalis is in talks with a number of organisations regarding IPv6, including the University of Southampton, an early IPv6 adopter and a founding member of the IPv6 Forum. Tim Chown, lecturer in Computer Science at the University of Southampton says, “As a university with a strong reputation for computer science it's incredibly important that we provide a leading edge research and teaching environment. We have been proactive in IPv6 R&D and running IPv6 in production across thousands of systems within our Computer Science department for several years, making many of those services publicly available. We welcome the IPv6 'wake up' message from Logicalis for the UK, and the opportunity to work with them as our IT services partner to roll out IPv6 more widely across our own campus.
“We share Logicalis' view that IPv6 deployment is critical for future Internet innovation and growth. We would thus recommend that organisations survey their systems for IPv6 capability, contact their ISPs to determine their IPv6 readiness, and build IPv6 requirements into all procurements to ease future IPv6 deployment. Furthermore, with almost all common devices supporting IPv6, and invariably having it enabled by default, organisations should also consider and manage the security implications of IPv6, even where their networks are ostensibly IPv4-only.”