IP Technologies White Papers
Migrating to IPv6 on the Solaris OS
Overview The biggest difference between IPv4 and IPv6 is addressing, because IPv6 uses 128 bits for addressing compared to IPv4, which uses 32 bits. IPv6 can be used to specify 2 128 (about 3.4 x 10 38) addresses or about 5 x 10 28 unique addresses for each of the 6.5 billion people alive on planet Earth today. IPv4, with 32 bits of addressing, can be used to specify 2 32 (about 4.3 x 10 9) addresses. IPv4 was to have run out of addresses by 2008, but with Network Address Translation (NAT) and Classless Internet Domain Routing (CIDR) it seems to have gotten an extension.
| Publisher | Sun Microsystems | File Format | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date Published | March 2008 | ||
| Format | White Papers | ||
| Topics | |||
Going Global With Geolocation.
This white paper, sponsored by Quova, Inc., a leading provider of IP geolocation data and services, illustrates how companies are using geolocation to greatly improve the user experience across languages...
How IP geolocation can improve your website experience and marketing activity
With geolocation technology, you can know a web user's real world whereabouts. This report examines the benefits from the fictional retailer's point of view. Things-4-You- a thriving online business, which...
Learn how Performance Metrics for Telcomm Expense Management Drive new ROIs and SLAs
Metrics that force organizations to think about service level agreements and measurements differently Learn how new high performance telecom expense management solutions will increase your ROI. Watch "Learn how Performance...
IP Telephony from A to Z
Making the decision to switch to IP telephony and deploying the system is no small task. But help is here. Download this complementary e-book to assist you with your pre-decision...
Strategic Guide to Business Phone Systems:
This 32 page eBook was created to help you understand the key issues involved in choosing and deploying the best UC system for your organization. This guide takes you through...



