English summary of Japanese MIC effort on v4v6
Hi, Here attached is a English version of a presentation made by Ministry of Internal affairs and Communication (MIC) of Japan, as of December 2007. There are newer information/reports published in January, but still all in Japanese. Look at the last few slides, in particular # 17, giving some findings of the Working group comparing different technical approaches and impact assesment to the users. These works are carried out by some 20 panel of experts, ISPs, service providers of various kinds, with academics. I was not involved at that stage, but will be joining soon for the policy discussion. izumi
Izumi AIZU wrote:
Here attached is a English version of a presentation made by Ministry of Internal affairs and Communication (MIC) of Japan, as of December 2007. There are newer information/reports published in January, but still all in Japanese.
Thank you, Izumi, The issues you have identified through the report have been very helpful, especially regarding the difficulty of implementing migration to IPV6 at higher levels. It is important that ICANN not deny responsibility in this regard, simply because it is only technically involved at the highest level. It is impossible to promote IPV6 if it does not work well past theoretical concepts. It must be shown to work at the application level as well; while ICANN does not bear the task of making this all happen it's important that it does not put itself in the role of promoting a technology that is not sufficiently tested to work in real world use. - Evan
so sorry - attached here! izumi 2008/2/12, Izumi AIZU <iza@anr.org>:
Hi,
Here attached is a English version of a presentation made by Ministry of Internal affairs and Communication (MIC) of Japan, as of December 2007. There are newer information/reports published in January, but still all in Japanese.
Look at the last few slides, in particular # 17, giving some findings of the Working group comparing different technical approaches and impact assesment to the users.
These works are carried out by some 20 panel of experts, ISPs, service providers of various kinds, with academics. I was not involved at that stage, but will be joining soon for the policy discussion.
izumi
-- >> Izumi Aizu << Institute for HyperNetwork Society, Oita Kumon Center, Tama University, Tokyo Japan * * * * * << Writing the Future of the History >> www.anr.org
participants (2)
-
Evan Leibovitch -
Izumi AIZU