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IPv6: Asia's agent of change: Northeast Asia leads the way in giving everything including the kitchen sink.


ON THE INTERNET, as on a city street, location is everything. In a world of data where an address is the only proof of being, getting a location is the foremost concern; lose that and existence stops. 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.
 (IP) is the way the Internet determines a user's address and identifies a packet of data. It works by assigning addresses to everything connected to the Net (which then becomes a host), and including those addresses in the headers attached to the packets of data transmitted on the Net. Only with such an address can information be sent and received. The problem is, this protocol was set nearly 30 years ago, when the popularity (and coming ubiquity Ubiquity
See also Omnipresence.



Burma-Shave

their signs seen as “verses of the wayside throughout America.” [Am. Commerce and Folklore: Misc.
) of the Internet was not even a dream. The current standard, IPv4, was developed in the 70s and adapted by Darpa, an organization of the American Department of Defense, in 1981. While France, for instance, was busy with its own Minitel network, the Internet was originally built mostly by and for Americans, so the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  ended up with the lion's share of addresses, approximately 74 percent.

Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) is the agent of change. Approved by the current standards body, the Internet Engineering Task Force (c/o Corporation for National Research Initiatives (CNRI), Reston, VA, www.ietf.org) Founded in 1986, the IETF is a non-membership, open, voluntary standards organization dedicated to identifying problems and opportunities in IP data networks and proposing technical solutions to the  (IETF See Internet Engineering Task Force.

IETF - Internet Engineering Task Force
), "a large, open, international community of network designers, operators, vendors and researchers," IPv6 will be more equitable. Making the change overnight would be expensive, though, because new hardware is required; so it is taking time, the change happening incrementally as providers routinely update older hardware. But with the backing of the Japanese government ([yen] 8 billion in 2001 alone) and industry, along with that of other countries like South Korea and China, IPv6 is coming to Asia first. Both the Japanese and Chinese governments Ever since Republic of China founded in January 1st, 1912, China has had several regional and national governments. List
  • Chinese Soviet Republic
  • Provisional Government of the Republic of China
  • Reformed Government of the Republic of China
 have set a target date of 2005 for full implementation.

As things get serious, the amateurs are turning pro, and big services are launching. The 6Bone, an IETF free test bed for checking IPv6 since 1996, announced in March that it would no longer accept new applicants and would begin completely phasing itself out by 2005, as commercial services become the norm. In Japan, large-scale Interact access provider Interact Initiative Japan rolled out its "IPv6 Gateway" service in March, targeting ISPs, ASPs, contents providers, household-appliance makers, the medical industry, automakers and hardware and software developers. A company signed up with the service is provided approximately 3x[10.sup.26] IP addresses per contract so that they can assign IPv6 addresses to each of their products or services.

Behind the momentum in Asia are two things: A simple need for more addresses and something even more visionary--a plan in which nearly all electronic devices, including phones, televisions, refrigerators, elevators, trains and automobiles, become part of the network. For personal electronics manufacturers in Japan and the rest of Asia hoping to regain some economic momentum, IPv6 is an issue of great importance. With the network in place, the usefulness, effectiveness and ultimate success of at whole new range of devices--consumer and enterprise--will be decided.

According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Silvia Hagen, the Swiss-based IPv6 consultant and author of the technical resource IPv6 Essentials, what drives the deployment in Asia is basically just the address space problem. "Realize," she says, "that the US holds approximately 70 percent of the total IPv4 address space (with a population of about 300 million people) and, for instance, China has 20 million IPv4 addresses and needs 320 million just to connect their educational networks." Providers in the US such as Genuity, she points out, sometimes have more IPv4 address space than almost all of Asia. Resourceful re·source·ful  
adj.
Able to act effectively or imaginatively, especially in difficult situations.



re·sourceful·ly adv.
 administrators have developed something of a hack by employing Network Address Translation to assign private addresses to groups of users working out of the same IP address. This reduces privacy and can put a strain on systems, so it's hardly a desirable fix.

For the Internet to fulfill even its most basic level of service in a country like China, the switch to a new protocol is certain. Says Hagen, "They simply have no choice ... How do you want to connect China to the interact with IPv4?"

In 1992, as the Internet was beginning to gain momentum (two years before the first advertising-based Web sites appeared), IETF began work on a new protocol to address a lack of addresses. IPv6 is a combination of the best of them. IPv4 offers a maximum of 4.3 billion addresses, divided unequally. IPv6 will provide 3.4x[10.sup.38] addresses. With such a number, it hardly matters if the division is equitable, IIJ IIJ Internet Initiative Japan
IIJ Internet Initiative Japan Inc. (Internet Service Provider)
IIJ Indo-Iranian Journal
IIJ Is It Jazz (Boston band) 
 is offering each customer of its Gateway service more addresses than are currently available in the whole Internet using IPv4. At least from the perspective of the early 21st century, that's an incredible abundance.

"If you imagine that IPv4 was developed in the early 70s, and it is capable of running today's networks that were beyond imagination at that time, the developers did an awesome job," Hagen says. "The same people have now learned from more than 20 years of experience with IPv4 and developed IPv6, which will be able to deal with the networks and services of today and tomorrow."

Tomorrow's services are where things get interesting. Junichiro "Itojun" Hagino, a researcher in the III laboratory, affirms that his company is pushing the standard as a way to ensure the vision of "every house connected via DSL DSL
 in full Digital Subscriber Line

Broadband digital communications connection that operates over standard copper telephone wires. It requires a DSL modem, which splits transmissions into two frequency bands: the lower frequencies for voice (ordinary
" and also to rectify a situation in which US students with laptops each have their own IP address, while those in Asia do not have that luxury. "It isn't fair," he says. "IPv4 is not enough for supporting IP-enabled cellphones, IP-enabled vehicles, IP-enabled home appliances, IP-enabled PDAs, IP-enabled watches and what have you. IPv6 is a must for all of us."

Of course, fairness isn't everything, and Hagino admits another reason why Japanese industry is so serious about IPv6: "(We) are seeking a way to get more market share in Internet-related equipment, routers, switches, whatever, during the transition period." Hitachi is an early subscriber to IIJ's IPv6 Gateway service, clearly planning on giving a boost in services to its IPv6-compliant GR2000 series of routers, which it markets worldwide.

And it's not just servers. For Japan, as with the rest of Asia, a region with a long history of turning new technologies into seductive and profitable consumer goods consumer goods

Any tangible commodity purchased by households to satisfy their wants and needs. Consumer goods may be durable or nondurable. Durable goods (e.g., autos, furniture, and appliances) have a significant life span, often defined as three years or more, and
, this is important. Computer use continues to grow, but Internet-linked devices and networked everything could be a much bigger boom. A network increases in value exponentially as its users rise afterall: One fax machine in a void has no value. As more of our world becomes a part of the internet, having reliable access to that network becomes more valuable, just as unforeseen uses arise. IPv6, by giving more than enough addresses to assign one for every inch on the planet, paves the way for interesting effects. A Berkeley, California Berkeley is a city on the east shore of San Francisco Bay in Northern California, in the United States. Its neighbors to the south are the cities of Oakland and Emeryville. To the north is the city of Albany and the unincorporated community of Kensington. , company called Dust was founded in 2002 to sell millimeter-sized networked computers, ort "motes". Who knows what will arise when a single network connects your phone in Tokyo, laboratories in Northern California Northern California, sometimes referred to as NorCal, is the northern portion of the U.S. state of California. The region contains the San Francisco Bay Area, the state capital, Sacramento; as well as the substantial natural beauty of the redwood forests, the northern  painted with such "smart dust" and all the video cameras in the world? While no one knows, it's a safe bet that Japanese and Korean manufacturers will have some nice equipment to make it consumer friendly.

Another researcher, Nobuo Okabe, manager at Yokogawa Electric This article or section needs sources or references that appear in reliable, third-party publications. Alone, primary sources and sources affiliated with the subject of this article are not sufficient for an accurate encyclopedia article. , has recently made a telling change in his activities. Okabe, along with others from the University of Tokyo “Todai” redirects here. For the restaurant called Todai, see Todai (restaurant).

The University of Tokyo (東京大学
 and Yokogawa Digital Computer Association, founded the Tahi organization (www.tahi.org) in 1998 to write free software that tested and verified IPv6 implementations. This kind of industry-sponsored standards help is a typical way of driving change on the Net, and Tahi seems to be doing its job admirably. But Okabe has recently traded the reins of that project for Taca (Tiny software and system Architecture for non-Computer Appliances, www.taca.jp), a group focusing on some big action: getting non-computer appliance makers to switch to IP in its updated version. Or, in the project's words, the group "researches, develops and opens technologies that enable 'everything on IPv6.'"

Persuading manufacturers to build devices that use the Internet instead of proprietary networks is one of Taca's chief goals. This is challenging, Okabe says, because people using non-Internet networked technologies work in areas that "are very cost sensitive" and sometimes have a hard time seeing the advantages in switching to the Internet. "Internet technologies are obviously more costly than the many legacy/closed/proprietary network technologies," he says. "To introduce Internet technologies impacts CPU CPU
 in full central processing unit

Principal component of a digital computer, composed of a control unit, an instruction-decoding unit, and an arithmetic-logic unit.
 performance, code size, work area size or memory size on a system of non-Internet areas."

While Okabe says that IPv6 is "necessary" for future development, solving address space, adding a plug-and-play function and enabling end-to-end communication, he sees difficulties in the short term because so many companies have investments in legacy systems with specialized protocols. But eventually it will be hard to compete with the advantages offered by one network that a vast number of great minds are constantly working to improve and in which so many have a deep investment. Taca's strategy to convince industries is to "show them the big picture" and the many benefits of Internet technologies.

IPv6 offers features that will give more consumer and corporate confidence in the Net. A security feature (IPsec) is a mandatory part of the package, giving end-to-end security from your computer, phone or refrigerator all the way to its destination. The ability to set the priority to data packets ensures that pieces of data for time-sensitive applications, streaming audio A one-way audio transmission over a data network. It is widely used on the Web as well as company networks to play audio clips and Internet radio. Computers in home networks stream audio (mostly music) to digital media hubs connected to home theaters.  or video will arrive without the gaps that cause annoying static. Multicasting, which lets a computer send a single stream that later gets picked up by many end users, is also allowed. This is a much more efficient way of handling bandwidth-intensive streams like movies and concerts on demand. Also a plug-and-play ability will allow any new device to instantly give itself a permanent IP address, useful if loads of networked devices pop on the scene. "IPv6," Hagen says," will restore the simple Internet as it was supposed to be, with end-to-end connections and end-to-end security."

Connection with the Internet can come in many different ways--via wireless LAN A local area network that transmits over the air typically in the 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz unlicensed frequency band. It does not require line of sight between sender and receiver. Wireless base stations (access points) are wired to an Ethernet network and transmit a radio frequency over an area , Bluetooth, a power line (Echonet), a wire-line LAN (Local Area Network) A communications network that serves users within a confined geographical area. The "clients" are the user's workstations typically running Windows, although Mac and Linux clients are also used.  (Ethernet) or IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, New York, www.ieee.org) A membership organization that includes engineers, scientists and students in electronics and allied fields.  1394. Getting there is going to be very easy. How to deal with all of these new residents is the kicker Kicker

A right, warrant, or some other feature added to a debt instrument to make it more desirable to potential investors.

Notes:
The ability to trade a bond or other debt instrument in for stock may entice investors, if they feel the stock will appreciate.
, so IPv6 is needed. As the model of a personal computer tied to the desktop grows into a world of portable and accessible devices, new functions emerge. Hagen has seen implementations that affirm her belief. "In Japan, 1,200 taxis taxis (tăk`sĭs), movement of animals either toward or away from a stimulus, such as light (phototaxis), heat (thermotaxis), chemicals (chemotaxis), gravity (geotaxis), and touch (thigmotaxis).  are connected with IPv6 and receive weather and traffic information while roaming through town. In Germany there is a beautiful project called GANS GANS Georgia Association of Nursing Students
GANS Genealogical Association of Nova Scotia (Canada)
GANS Global Access Navigation/Safety (USAF GATM program office)
GANS Generic Ambient Network Signaling
 (Guardian Angel guardian angel

believed to protect a particular person. [Folklore: Misc.]

See : Angel


guardian angel

term for Christian namesake who watches over a young child. [Christianity: Misc.]

See : Guardianship
 System). Two universities together with Ericsson have implemented a system where emergency teams can connect with experts back at the hospital if they are in need of help for a patient in critical status. They press one button to connect to the center (over IPv6) no matter where they are. The network is used to transfer pictures, voice and vital data."

For Japan, as for the rest of Asia, the stakes in getting it right are very high, because a next generation of appliances rests on having workable, dependable access to the Internet. Even those who are unconvinced of the need for a Net-enabled toaster See intranet toaster and Video Toaster.

(jargon) toaster - 1. The archetypal really stupid application for an embedded microprocessor controller; often used in comments that imply that a scheme is inappropriate technology (but see elevator controller).
 might be grateful for that solid network when a rescue team starts to operate.

JOHN ALDERMAN John Alderman was a Praying Indian who shot and killed Metacomet (also known as King Philip) in 1676 as part of an expedition led by Captain Benjamin Church.

As a reward, Alderman received King Philip's head and one hand. The rest of his body was quartered and hung on trees.
 (IPv6: Asia's Agent of Change, page 24) is the author of Sonic Boom, a book about the online music phenomenon that was named a "notable book of 2002" by the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Times. Alderman's writing traces the intersections of culture, technology and business and has been featured in the Guardian, Wired, Interior Design and many other publications. He currently lives in Tokyo, where his band Three Day Stubble once headlined a sold-out show at Shibuya's Club Quattro.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Japan Inc. Communications
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Alderman, John
Publication:Japan Inc.
Geographic Code:90ASI
Date:Jul 1, 2003
Words:1989
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