Cisco Chairman and CEO John Chambers discusses the IPV6 launch and its impact on the Internet. (30 sec)
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Internet Protocol (IP) defines how computers communicate over a network. IPv4 contains just over 4 billion unique IP addresses, which were completely allocated to specific geographic regions on February 3, 2011. As the Internet transitions, organizations must adopt IPv6 to support future business continuity, growth, and global expansion.
The need for business continuity and innovation are central to IPv6. Learn how you can preserve existing investments, prepare for IPv6, and prosper in the new world.
In Depth
If we don't overcome the challenges of IPv4 we will slow down the growth of the Internet and lose momentum as an industry. IPv6 is important to all of us, to everyone around the world. It is crucial to our ability to tie together everyone and every device.President and CEO of Cisco Systems
As a pioneer of IPv6 technology since 1996, and a trusted business and technology partner, Cisco is an established leader in your journey towards IPv6 planning and migration.
Why CiscoAt Cisco we are committed architecturally to IPv6 across the board: All of our devices, all of our applications and all of our services.President and CEO of Cisco Systems
Essential technology, proven services, certified training, and certified software and hardware combine to create your personalized IPv6 migration plan.
ImplementationMaximize the value of your existing investments and prepare for the next wave of Internet growth.
Education Enterprise Federal Service Provider Small BusinessGet the latest insights to design, configure, deploy, and troubleshoot IPv6.
Visit IPv6 Support Community Get Gold-certified IPv6 Training Visit IPv6 Knowledge Base Watch TechWiseTV Cover IPv6 Visit Network Computing Tech Center