Saturday, December 9, 2006

Companies focus wares on IPv6 transition

Small and midsize companies have jumped into the IPv6 market to help agencies understand and prepare for a fundamental shift to the new protocol. Although procurement officials are looking ahead two years to assess their critical expenses related to IPv6, vendors must be ready now, market experts say.

“It’s ripe right now to get with the right person who will be the IPv6 transition manager and just solicit and say, ‘Hey, we’re here to help,’ ” said Peter Tseronis, director of network services at the Education Department and co-chairman of the CIO Council’s IPv6 Working Group.

Agencies are hunting for that killer application to ease their transition to the new IP, Tseronis said.

The Office of Management and Budget issued a memo Aug. 2, 2005, mandating agencies to move to IPv6. The directive requires agencies to build IPv6 network backbones by June 30, 2008. IPv6 increases address space, promotes flexibility and functionality, and enhances security.

Businesses have recognized the growing market spawned by OMB’s IPv6 mandate and are creating products and services with an eye on the transition deadline, which is only 19 months away.

The potential federal market is big. “It’s tens of millions of dollars over the next couple of years for us,” said Bruce Sinclair, president and chief executive officer of IPv6 solutions provider Hexago.

In a recent Juniper Networks survey, 67 percent of nearly 300 industry leaders said the mandated transition is accelerating the pace of developing IPv6-capable products and services. But a Cisco Systems survey in June found that less than 8 percent of the 200 defense and civilian IPv6 decision-makers surveyed said their agencies had completed their transition plans.

Read More Of The Story: FCW.com - Companies focus wares on IPv6 transition

No comments: