October 21, 2011

IPv6 by next year, but won't see mass usage in India


BANGALORE, INDIA: “Today, the rate at which mobile and fixed line subscribers are growing in India, who in turn are going to consume a whole lot of data services over the network, does not sync with the number of IPv4 addressesallotted for the region. So, any company which is doing business over the Internet, which wants to maintain the services, will have to move on to IPv6, as IPv4 is fast exhausting,” says Truman Boyes, leader of the network architects that comprise Juniper Network’s Asia Pacific professional services consultancy team.

He was speaking to Deepa Damodaran of CIOL during an interview, recently. Excerpts:

CIOL: How is the adoption of IPv6 happening in APAC, especially India?

Truman: 
We notice that APAC is very aggressive in deploying IPv6 in production. India is leading the charge and we have a few projects that we are working currently.

When IPv4 addresses were allocated to different geographic regions, during the mid 1990s, Asia Pacific got a small handout of addresses, compared to other regions, particularly America, which got a substantially large address block

India today has 850-900 million mobile subscribers and adds about 11 million subscribers every month, we have never seen anything like this in other part of the world. So in order to sustain this growth, we need to have unique addressing for them .

So there is big push to stack IPv6 and IPv4 deployments. Some providers in India have even asked us about providing IPv6 networks.

There are other more cautious providers who are looking to have both IPv4 and IPv6 networks.

With the exhaustion of IPv4 addresses in APAC, some providers are just looking to procure IPv6 and then provide some translation mechanism to connect the rest of the Internet for IPv4. So the actual consumer will get only IPv6 content in their mobile devices.

CIOL: So by when will the IPv6 content delivery and network deployment really happen in India?

Truman: 
Especially with the Indian Government mandate that all telecom service providers should have IPv6 network by March 2012, we are going to see a substantial uptake for IPv6 in India next year.
However, it will mean that only the networks will support IPv6, but not all consumers will have native IPv6 in their handset.

The growth rate is phenomenal. The deployment is happening and equipment is there. Most of the large providers have already deployed some kind of IPv6 capable network and the fact that the government is getting behind, this is a good sign. The US government placed pressure on everyone who does business with the government to provide equipments that are IPv6 compatible

And we are seeing the same happening in India and it is a good sign that the government and the whole industry is taking it seriously.






courtesy to CIOL

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