CISCO DELIVERS SECOND PHASE OF IPV6 FUNCTIONALITY FOR INDUSTRY'S MOST ROBUST INFRASTRUCTURE SOLUTION.Cisco Systems “Cisco” redirects here. For other uses, see Cisco (disambiguation). Cisco System,Inc. (NASDAQ: CSCO, HKSE: 4333 ) is an American multinational corporation with 54,000 employees and annual revenue of US $28.48 billion as of 2006. , Inc., (NASDAQ NASDAQ in full National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations U.S. market for over-the-counter securities. Established in 1971 by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), NASDAQ is an automated quotation system that reports on :CSCO CSCO Cisco Systems Incorporated (stock symbol) CSCO Chief Supply Chain Officer ) has announced the availability of the second phase of Internet Protocol See Internet and TCP/IP. (networking) Internet Protocol - (IP) The network layer for the TCP/IP protocol suite widely used on Ethernet networks, defined in STD 5, RFC 791. IP is a connectionless, best-effort packet switching protocol. version 6 (IPv6) features in Cisco IOS Cisco IOS (originally Internetwork Operating System) is the software used on the vast majority of Cisco Systems routers and all current Cisco network switches. IOS is a package of routing, switching, internetworking and telecommunications functions tightly integrated with a (R) Software. These features, available across the widest breadth of platforms in the industry, build on Cisco's delivery of the industry's first IPv6 solution in May 2001. Cisco's Phase II functionality further enables the integration of IPv6 with the current IPv4-based Internet, which is essential to emerging IPv6 markets and applications such as mobile data, home access and carrier infrastructure. "In Japan and other Asia-Pacific countries, the demand for IP addresses is being driven by the proliferation of mobile phones as well as Internet-based gaming and telephony applications," states Lawrence Orans, senior analyst, Gartner, Inc. "IPv6 solves this problem, and as it becomes more widely deployed, the need for more advanced IPv6 functionality will also increase in order to address areas such as quality of service, network management tools and route optimization for mobile devices." "The key to successfully deploying IPv6 services is the ability to integrate with the existing IPv4 infrastructure and, therefore, to migrate customers and applications seamlessly," says Joel Bion, vice president of Cisco's Internet Technologies Division. "Cisco's Phase II solution enables this integration by providing unique services such as protocol translation between IPv6 and IPv4 networks, which preserves full IP access to Internet services as IPv6 is rolled out. Cisco also enables integration with Multi-Protocol Label Switching (networking) label switching - A routing technique that uses information from existing IP routing protocols to identify IP datagrams with labels and forwards them to a modified switch or router, which then uses the labels to switch the datagrams through the network. (MPLS (1) (MultiProtocol Lambda Switching) The earlier name for GMPLS. See GMPLS. (2) (MultiProtocol Label Switching) A standard from the IETF for including routing information in the packets of an IP network. ), which allows service providers to offer IPv6 access to their customers with minimal upgrades to their existing infrastructure." Additionally, Cisco's IPv6 Phase II solution introduces comprehensive security support, scalable routing, management services and distributed switching. Cisco is also demonstrating forthcoming IPv6 Phase III capabilities including native support for the Open Shortest Path First (OSPF (Open Shortest Path First) A routing protocol that determines the best path for routing IP traffic over a TCP/IP network based on distance between nodes and several quality parameters. ) routing protocol for large-scale deployments and hardware-accelerated IPv6 forwarding on the Cisco 12000 Series Internet Router at the IPv6 Forum Summit in Japan on December 3rd. As market requirements mature and adoption continues, Cisco will continue to lead in the delivery of additional standards-compliant IPv6 services via Cisco IOS Software across its comprehensive platform portfolio. Cisco's IPv6 Phase II functionality is available now for limited deployment, with wider availability scheduled in the first half of 2002. Platforms supported at this time include: Cisco 800 Series Routers; Cisco 1400 Series Routers; Cisco 1600 Series Routers; Cisco 1700 Series Routers; Cisco 2500 Series Cisco 2500 series routers The Cisco 2500 series of routers are a series of 19" rack mount access routers typically used to connect ethernet or token ring networks via ISDN or leased serial connections (ie. Frame Relay, T1 etc). Routers; Cisco 2600 Series Routers; Cisco 3600 Series Routers; Cisco 7100, 7200 and 7500 Series Routers and Cisco 12000 Series Internet Routers. Support for Catalyst 6500 series and Cisco 7600 Series Routers is planned to be available with a future release of Cisco IOS Software. Customers interested in testing or deploying Cisco's IPv6 solution should contact their local sales office. Additional information can be found at www.cisco.com/ipv6. |
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