IPv6 Info
E-Book
Internet Protocol version 6(IPv6) has been introduces to remedy the looming internet address shortage. Eventually, every electronic device will be required to convert to IPv6 to maintain internet connectivity. Though they will run tandem at first, IPv6 will soon replace Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv6), today's dominant IP. In fact, the U.S. federal government has mandated that its IT infrastructure transition to IPv6 by summer of 2008. Don't get left behind.
To minimize disruption to the flow of your business enterprise, it's time to start thinking about how you'll migrate to IPv6. WWT is here to help you with training, planning, and the creation of a testing environment, so that your transition to IPv6 is as seamless as possible.
Read on learn more on
what is IPv6?
Business Benefits
Training: Key to Success
Steps to a Successful Transition
Why WWT?
from the E-book.
Understanding IPv6 Ebook
This book is a straightforward discussion of the concepts, principles, and processes of Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) and how IPv6 is supported by the Microsoft Windows .NET Server 2003 family of operating systems. It is primarily a discussion of protocols and processes rather than a discussion of planning, configuration, deployment, and management. It is also mostly about IPv6 rather than the specifics of the implementation for the Windows .NET Server 2003 family. Therefore, this book does not contain in-depth implementation details of the IPv6 protocol for the Windows .NET Server 2003 family, such as structures, tables, buffers, or coding logic. These details are highly guarded Microsoft intellectual property that is of interest only to a relative handful of software developers.
The purpose of this book is to provide an educational vehicle that will enable one to learn IPv6 to a fair technical depth?the terms, the addresses, the protocols, and the processes. This is not intended to be a breezy marketing overview of IPv6 and how it "provides integrated and interoperable technologies to enable exciting new scenarios for personal and enterprise computing."