This document provides an update on IPv6 deployment globally and for specific countries and regions. Some of the key points summarized are:
- Global IPv6 end-user readiness has increased 43.87% in the last 12 months and is now at 16.11%.
- Belgium has the highest IPv6 capability rate at 59.69% while many Asian and European countries rank highly as well. Trinidad and Tobago saw a 37.83% increase and ranks in the top 15.
- Studies have shown IPv6 performance is on par with IPv4 in terms of speed and reliability with some networks like LinkedIn seeing improvements over IPv6.
- Industry trends show the rise of mobile access and devices
Global IPv6 adoption has increased 47% over the last year to 16.21% capable. Some countries like Belgium and India have over 50% capability while mobile operators are driving uptake in many countries. In Australia capability rose 83% to 17.93% with Telstra at 47.56%. Korea saw an 1110% rise to 9.2% with SK Telecom leading at 70.95%. Thailand grew 197% to 8.07% with AIS Fibre and AIS 3G showing strong results. Overall mobile operators and key players are helping to spread IPv6 adoption across the Asia Pacific region.
The document discusses the current state of IPv6 adoption based on various statistics. It notes that as of November 2017, 25% of the top 1000 websites support IPv6 and IPv6 capability among end users has increased 112% in the last year to 17.02%. It also examines IPv6 adoption statistics specifically for Nepal, finding that while IPv6 address space assigned is much greater than IPv4, actual IPv6 capability among Nepalese users remains at 0%. The document analyzes IPv6 performance data, finding that in some cases IPv6 connections are up to 8 times more likely to fail but can also be up to 40% faster in some networks.
A review of current worldwide IPv6 deploymentAPNIC
Presentation given by George Michaelson, APNIC's Senior R&D Scientist, at the 26th Taiwan Network Information Centre’s Open Policy Meeting (TWNIC OPM), held in Taipei, Taiwan from 22 to 23 June 2016
APNIC's Senior Research and Development Scientist George Michaelson gives an overview of global IPv6 trends in 2017 at the CNNIC OPM 2017 noting that IPv6 is now over the initial deployment and entering normal daily use in a significant number of economies.
The document discusses IPv4 and IPv6 address allocation trends over time. It finds that while IPv6 address allocations by RIRs have steadily increased year-over-year, much of the allocated space remains unused or unadvertised. For IPv4, address transfers have become common since exhaustion, but the majority of transferred space does not appear in RIR logs and may involve legacy space or leases. BGP data suggests a significant amount of IPv4 shifting occurs outside of the official transfer process.
This document summarizes the growth of the APAN backbone network from 1996 to 2019. It describes how APAN started as a loosely coupled community without owning its own links, and traces the development and expansion of key backbone links between countries in Asia and to other regions. These included the APII, TEIN, and TransPAC networks, which grew from Mbps to multi-100Gbps capacities over time. The document also discusses opportunities for future North APAN projects, submarine cable maps, performance monitoring, and expanding APAN collaboration.
IPv6 readiness among APEC TEL member economiesAPNIC
APNIC's External Relations Manager, Klée Aiken, presented an update of IPv6 end user readiness among APEC economies at APEC TEL 52, in Auckland, New Zealand.
This document provides an update on IPv6 deployment globally and for specific countries and regions. Some of the key points summarized are:
- Global IPv6 end-user readiness has increased 43.87% in the last 12 months and is now at 16.11%.
- Belgium has the highest IPv6 capability rate at 59.69% while many Asian and European countries rank highly as well. Trinidad and Tobago saw a 37.83% increase and ranks in the top 15.
- Studies have shown IPv6 performance is on par with IPv4 in terms of speed and reliability with some networks like LinkedIn seeing improvements over IPv6.
- Industry trends show the rise of mobile access and devices
Global IPv6 adoption has increased 47% over the last year to 16.21% capable. Some countries like Belgium and India have over 50% capability while mobile operators are driving uptake in many countries. In Australia capability rose 83% to 17.93% with Telstra at 47.56%. Korea saw an 1110% rise to 9.2% with SK Telecom leading at 70.95%. Thailand grew 197% to 8.07% with AIS Fibre and AIS 3G showing strong results. Overall mobile operators and key players are helping to spread IPv6 adoption across the Asia Pacific region.
The document discusses the current state of IPv6 adoption based on various statistics. It notes that as of November 2017, 25% of the top 1000 websites support IPv6 and IPv6 capability among end users has increased 112% in the last year to 17.02%. It also examines IPv6 adoption statistics specifically for Nepal, finding that while IPv6 address space assigned is much greater than IPv4, actual IPv6 capability among Nepalese users remains at 0%. The document analyzes IPv6 performance data, finding that in some cases IPv6 connections are up to 8 times more likely to fail but can also be up to 40% faster in some networks.
A review of current worldwide IPv6 deploymentAPNIC
Presentation given by George Michaelson, APNIC's Senior R&D Scientist, at the 26th Taiwan Network Information Centre’s Open Policy Meeting (TWNIC OPM), held in Taipei, Taiwan from 22 to 23 June 2016
APNIC's Senior Research and Development Scientist George Michaelson gives an overview of global IPv6 trends in 2017 at the CNNIC OPM 2017 noting that IPv6 is now over the initial deployment and entering normal daily use in a significant number of economies.
The document discusses IPv4 and IPv6 address allocation trends over time. It finds that while IPv6 address allocations by RIRs have steadily increased year-over-year, much of the allocated space remains unused or unadvertised. For IPv4, address transfers have become common since exhaustion, but the majority of transferred space does not appear in RIR logs and may involve legacy space or leases. BGP data suggests a significant amount of IPv4 shifting occurs outside of the official transfer process.
This document summarizes the growth of the APAN backbone network from 1996 to 2019. It describes how APAN started as a loosely coupled community without owning its own links, and traces the development and expansion of key backbone links between countries in Asia and to other regions. These included the APII, TEIN, and TransPAC networks, which grew from Mbps to multi-100Gbps capacities over time. The document also discusses opportunities for future North APAN projects, submarine cable maps, performance monitoring, and expanding APAN collaboration.
IPv6 readiness among APEC TEL member economiesAPNIC
APNIC's External Relations Manager, Klée Aiken, presented an update of IPv6 end user readiness among APEC economies at APEC TEL 52, in Auckland, New Zealand.
This document summarizes Chunghwa Telecom's (CHT) IPv6 deployment status and plans. It discusses the IPv6 capabilities of CHT's fixed and mobile networks. It also outlines the stages of CHT's IPv6 deployment from trials beginning in 2011 to full commercial launches. The document identifies some issues in CHT's IPv6 implementation including increased latency for international content and interoperability between 3G and 4G networks. It provides metrics showing the performance of CHT's dual-stack network versus IPv4-only. Overall, the document evaluates CHT's progress in IPv6 and its goals to further promote IPv6 adoption in Taiwan.
Business of Sports Summit - Sydney March 2018Clive Dickens
The document discusses trends in digital media consumption and strategies for media companies. It notes that mobile internet access is growing globally and video now accounts for most mobile data traffic. Streaming allows people to access large amounts of digital content online. Over-the-top (OTT) video consumption in Australia has grown significantly and is expected to continue rising rapidly each year. The document advocates that media companies develop strategies for all digital platforms, not just digital, and own the rights to tell stories across screens. It provides examples of a company's success in broadcasting and streaming major sporting events like the Olympics and Melbourne Cup horse race.
ConnecTechAsia 2018: Global IPv6 Deployment UpdateAPNIC
Senior Internet Resource Analyst Anna Mulingbayan gives an update on global IPv6 deployment at the inaugural ConnecTechAsia 2018 event in Singapore from 26 to 28 June 2018.
The document summarizes an IPv6 readiness measurement BoF report from APNIC 46. It provides data on IPv6 allocation, BGP advertisement, service availability, and user availability in the Asia-Pacific region from December 2017 to August/September 2018. Key findings include an average 6.5% growth in IPv6 BGP advertisement, a 21.7% decline in IPv6 service availability, and a 34.6% growth in IPv6 user availability. Taiwan, Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia saw particularly large growth rates in user availability. The session concluded with plans to rename future meetings to the IPv6 Deployment session.
Maximising the Value of the NBN: Comparing to OECD and Australia's Top 10 Tra...Richard Ferrers
How fast is Australia's broadband (NBN) vs the OECD? Address to Telsoc Future Forum, Melbourne - 25 Feb 2020. How does comparing the National Broadband Network (NBN) to overseas experience tell us about the value of our NBN.
This document summarizes the results of an IPv6 survey of Japanese web domains conducted in December 2019. It found that 3% of domains and 1.94% of FQDNs supported IPv6, increases of 0.02% and 0.06% respectively from the previous month. The top ASes by number of IPv6 addresses were SAKURA Internet, Mirai Communication Network, Amazon, and Google. CDN IPv6 support rates ranged from 0.00% to 60.96% depending on the provider.
"Japan IPv6 Measurement" by Tomohiro Fujisaki.
A presentation given at the APNIC 40 IPv6 Readiness Measurement BoF and APIPv6TF sessions on Wed 9 Sep 2015.
APNIC's External Relations Program Manager, Melody Bendindang presented an update on IPv6 deployment at the APECT TEL 60 DSG in Seoul, South Korea, from 13 to 18 October 2019.
IPv6 readiness among APEC TEL member economiesAPNIC
Presented by Klée Aiken at the 54th Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Telecommunications and Information Working Group held in Kyoto, Japan from 31 October to 4 November.
The document provides an update on IPv6 deployment globally and in Southeast Asia. It summarizes that global IPv6 end-user readiness has increased 7.69% over the last 12 months to 16.94%. Specific countries and mobile networks in India, Thailand, Vietnam, and Malaysia are highlighted as having seen large increases in IPv6 capability, with some mobile networks over 200% growth. Performance tests show IPv6 can be as fast or faster than IPv4 in some situations. Industry trends of growing mobile usage and native IPv6 support in newer devices are positive drivers for further IPv6 adoption.
APNIC's Senior Advisor Strategic Engagment and Capacity Building Klée Aiken gives an update on IPv6 deployment in the Asia Pacific at APEC TEL 58 in Taiwan from 30 September to 5 October 2018.
APNIC Training Delivery Manager Tashi Phuntsho gives an update on the status of IPv6 deployment in Bhutan and neighbouring economies at SANOG 33 in Thimpu, Bhutan from 9 to 16 January 2019.
A review of current worldwide IPv6 deployment - HKNOG EditionAPNIC
This document analyzes global IPv6 deployment based on measurement data. It finds that worldwide IPv6 capability is around 6.5% according to APNIC measurements, though Google reports higher numbers around 10%. Some economies like Belgium, the US, and Japan have IPv6 capabilities above 10%, while most of the Asia Pacific region lags behind worldwide levels. The document suggests IPv6 deployment may be diverging, with some networks investing significantly in IPv6 and others remaining on IPv4, potentially leading to "two kinds of Internet".
Evolution of Mobile Networks and IPv6 - APEC TEL49APNIC
1) Mobile networks are transitioning to higher generations like 3G, 4G and LTE, bringing more smart devices online. This rapid growth is driving the need for more IP addresses.
2) Some mobile carriers like T-Mobile USA and Telstra have deployed IPv6 to support this expansion, allowing native IPv6 services on their 3G/4G networks.
3) Global IPv6 deployment is increasing steadily, with early adopters like Verizon seeing over 50% of traffic over IPv6. Mobile networks provide good opportunities to enable IPv6 as a default for new users and services.
Global IPv6 Summit Presentation - Global Deployment or Digital DivideAPNIC
This document summarizes IPv6 deployment efforts globally and in specific regions and countries. It discusses the growing need for IPv6 due to the depletion of IPv4 address space. Several case studies are presented on IPv6 deployment by mobile carriers like T-Mobile USA. Taiwan's government efforts to promote IPv6 are also summarized, as well as the work done by TWNIC and APNIC to measure IPv6 readiness and encourage adoption.
APNIC Senior Advisor - Strategic Engagement Joyce Chen gives an update of IPv6 deployment in the region at APEC TEL 62, held online from 3 to 4 March 2021.
This document summarizes APNIC's activities and key metrics from 2018-2019. It highlights that:
1) APNIC membership and resources delegated, such as IPv4 addresses, IPv6 addresses, and autonomous system numbers, continued growing significantly in 2018-2019 according to projections.
2) Network security was identified as the top challenge by APNIC members based on a survey, with specific issues like phishing, spam, and DDoS attacks noted.
3) Scarcity of IPv4 addresses remains a major issue, with deploying IPv6 and the high costs of IPv4 addresses and NAT being the top challenges for members.
The document discusses factors driving IPv6 deployment and analyzes measurement data on IPv6 adoption. It finds that while wealth and size of an ISP's customer base correlates somewhat with IPv6 deployment, the majority of IPv6 users are served by non-wealthy ISPs. Rapid growth of an ISP does not necessarily motivate accelerated IPv6 adoption either. Having a shortage of IPv4 addresses is likely the biggest factor, as the ISPs with the highest customer to IPv4 address ratios generally have higher IPv6 deployment. However, even with address shortages, some large ISPs still rely primarily on IPv4 for addressing growing customer networks.
The document analyzes global IPv6 deployment based on measurements from APNIC. It finds that worldwide IPv6 capability is around 6.5%, with some countries and networks higher. Indonesia has very low IPv6 capability currently around 0%, despite having adequate IPv4 and IPv6 address space assigned. The top Indonesian networks by sample size also show near 0% IPv6 capability.
APNIC Internet Resource Analyst Pubudu Jayasinghe presents on the status of IPv6 deployment at npNOG 5 in Kathmandu, Nepal, from from 8 to 13 December 2019.
This document summarizes Chunghwa Telecom's (CHT) IPv6 deployment status and plans. It discusses the IPv6 capabilities of CHT's fixed and mobile networks. It also outlines the stages of CHT's IPv6 deployment from trials beginning in 2011 to full commercial launches. The document identifies some issues in CHT's IPv6 implementation including increased latency for international content and interoperability between 3G and 4G networks. It provides metrics showing the performance of CHT's dual-stack network versus IPv4-only. Overall, the document evaluates CHT's progress in IPv6 and its goals to further promote IPv6 adoption in Taiwan.
Business of Sports Summit - Sydney March 2018Clive Dickens
The document discusses trends in digital media consumption and strategies for media companies. It notes that mobile internet access is growing globally and video now accounts for most mobile data traffic. Streaming allows people to access large amounts of digital content online. Over-the-top (OTT) video consumption in Australia has grown significantly and is expected to continue rising rapidly each year. The document advocates that media companies develop strategies for all digital platforms, not just digital, and own the rights to tell stories across screens. It provides examples of a company's success in broadcasting and streaming major sporting events like the Olympics and Melbourne Cup horse race.
ConnecTechAsia 2018: Global IPv6 Deployment UpdateAPNIC
Senior Internet Resource Analyst Anna Mulingbayan gives an update on global IPv6 deployment at the inaugural ConnecTechAsia 2018 event in Singapore from 26 to 28 June 2018.
The document summarizes an IPv6 readiness measurement BoF report from APNIC 46. It provides data on IPv6 allocation, BGP advertisement, service availability, and user availability in the Asia-Pacific region from December 2017 to August/September 2018. Key findings include an average 6.5% growth in IPv6 BGP advertisement, a 21.7% decline in IPv6 service availability, and a 34.6% growth in IPv6 user availability. Taiwan, Vietnam, Thailand and Malaysia saw particularly large growth rates in user availability. The session concluded with plans to rename future meetings to the IPv6 Deployment session.
Maximising the Value of the NBN: Comparing to OECD and Australia's Top 10 Tra...Richard Ferrers
How fast is Australia's broadband (NBN) vs the OECD? Address to Telsoc Future Forum, Melbourne - 25 Feb 2020. How does comparing the National Broadband Network (NBN) to overseas experience tell us about the value of our NBN.
This document summarizes the results of an IPv6 survey of Japanese web domains conducted in December 2019. It found that 3% of domains and 1.94% of FQDNs supported IPv6, increases of 0.02% and 0.06% respectively from the previous month. The top ASes by number of IPv6 addresses were SAKURA Internet, Mirai Communication Network, Amazon, and Google. CDN IPv6 support rates ranged from 0.00% to 60.96% depending on the provider.
"Japan IPv6 Measurement" by Tomohiro Fujisaki.
A presentation given at the APNIC 40 IPv6 Readiness Measurement BoF and APIPv6TF sessions on Wed 9 Sep 2015.
APNIC's External Relations Program Manager, Melody Bendindang presented an update on IPv6 deployment at the APECT TEL 60 DSG in Seoul, South Korea, from 13 to 18 October 2019.
IPv6 readiness among APEC TEL member economiesAPNIC
Presented by Klée Aiken at the 54th Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Telecommunications and Information Working Group held in Kyoto, Japan from 31 October to 4 November.
The document provides an update on IPv6 deployment globally and in Southeast Asia. It summarizes that global IPv6 end-user readiness has increased 7.69% over the last 12 months to 16.94%. Specific countries and mobile networks in India, Thailand, Vietnam, and Malaysia are highlighted as having seen large increases in IPv6 capability, with some mobile networks over 200% growth. Performance tests show IPv6 can be as fast or faster than IPv4 in some situations. Industry trends of growing mobile usage and native IPv6 support in newer devices are positive drivers for further IPv6 adoption.
APNIC's Senior Advisor Strategic Engagment and Capacity Building Klée Aiken gives an update on IPv6 deployment in the Asia Pacific at APEC TEL 58 in Taiwan from 30 September to 5 October 2018.
APNIC Training Delivery Manager Tashi Phuntsho gives an update on the status of IPv6 deployment in Bhutan and neighbouring economies at SANOG 33 in Thimpu, Bhutan from 9 to 16 January 2019.
A review of current worldwide IPv6 deployment - HKNOG EditionAPNIC
This document analyzes global IPv6 deployment based on measurement data. It finds that worldwide IPv6 capability is around 6.5% according to APNIC measurements, though Google reports higher numbers around 10%. Some economies like Belgium, the US, and Japan have IPv6 capabilities above 10%, while most of the Asia Pacific region lags behind worldwide levels. The document suggests IPv6 deployment may be diverging, with some networks investing significantly in IPv6 and others remaining on IPv4, potentially leading to "two kinds of Internet".
Evolution of Mobile Networks and IPv6 - APEC TEL49APNIC
1) Mobile networks are transitioning to higher generations like 3G, 4G and LTE, bringing more smart devices online. This rapid growth is driving the need for more IP addresses.
2) Some mobile carriers like T-Mobile USA and Telstra have deployed IPv6 to support this expansion, allowing native IPv6 services on their 3G/4G networks.
3) Global IPv6 deployment is increasing steadily, with early adopters like Verizon seeing over 50% of traffic over IPv6. Mobile networks provide good opportunities to enable IPv6 as a default for new users and services.
Global IPv6 Summit Presentation - Global Deployment or Digital DivideAPNIC
This document summarizes IPv6 deployment efforts globally and in specific regions and countries. It discusses the growing need for IPv6 due to the depletion of IPv4 address space. Several case studies are presented on IPv6 deployment by mobile carriers like T-Mobile USA. Taiwan's government efforts to promote IPv6 are also summarized, as well as the work done by TWNIC and APNIC to measure IPv6 readiness and encourage adoption.
APNIC Senior Advisor - Strategic Engagement Joyce Chen gives an update of IPv6 deployment in the region at APEC TEL 62, held online from 3 to 4 March 2021.
This document summarizes APNIC's activities and key metrics from 2018-2019. It highlights that:
1) APNIC membership and resources delegated, such as IPv4 addresses, IPv6 addresses, and autonomous system numbers, continued growing significantly in 2018-2019 according to projections.
2) Network security was identified as the top challenge by APNIC members based on a survey, with specific issues like phishing, spam, and DDoS attacks noted.
3) Scarcity of IPv4 addresses remains a major issue, with deploying IPv6 and the high costs of IPv4 addresses and NAT being the top challenges for members.
The document discusses factors driving IPv6 deployment and analyzes measurement data on IPv6 adoption. It finds that while wealth and size of an ISP's customer base correlates somewhat with IPv6 deployment, the majority of IPv6 users are served by non-wealthy ISPs. Rapid growth of an ISP does not necessarily motivate accelerated IPv6 adoption either. Having a shortage of IPv4 addresses is likely the biggest factor, as the ISPs with the highest customer to IPv4 address ratios generally have higher IPv6 deployment. However, even with address shortages, some large ISPs still rely primarily on IPv4 for addressing growing customer networks.
The document analyzes global IPv6 deployment based on measurements from APNIC. It finds that worldwide IPv6 capability is around 6.5%, with some countries and networks higher. Indonesia has very low IPv6 capability currently around 0%, despite having adequate IPv4 and IPv6 address space assigned. The top Indonesian networks by sample size also show near 0% IPv6 capability.
APNIC Internet Resource Analyst Pubudu Jayasinghe presents on the status of IPv6 deployment at npNOG 5 in Kathmandu, Nepal, from from 8 to 13 December 2019.
APNIC Internet Resource Analyst, Pubudu Jayasinghe, gives an update on IPv6 deployment in the region at bdNOG 11 in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, from 10 to 14 January 2020.
This document summarizes the current state of IPv6 deployment based on data from APNIC labs. IPv6 connectivity is growing steadily but varies significantly between regions, countries, and internet service providers. Some mobile and cable network operators have seen very rapid growth in IPv6 usage once enabled on their networks and devices, with usage increases over 100% in some cases over the past year. Overall IPv6 preferred usage is still low at around 4% but continuing to expand globally.
TWNIC OPM and IPv6 Summit 2013 - IPv6 DeploymentAPNIC
George Kuo of APNIC presnted the highlights of global and regional economies IPv6 readiness, governments’ initiative in the Asia Pacific region, as well as the growth path of the Internet.
APNIC Training Delivery Manager Tashi Phuntsho gave an update of global and regional IPv6 deployment, including statistics for Cambodia at the KHNOG 2 Online Webinar on 1 August 2020.
1. APNIC measures IPv6 deployment using online advertisements that test devices' ability to fetch URLs over IPv6. Their data shows 24.07% of end users are IPv6 capable, a over 400% increase in the past 5 years.
2. India has the highest percentage of IPv6 capable users at 63.79%, while many Asian and European economies have over 30%. Mobile networks are a major driver of IPv6 adoption.
3. IPv6 performance analysis shows a 1.4% global failure rate for TCP connections and varying results for connection speeds between regions, which may be influenced by different routing paths for IPv4 and IPv6.
Strategic Engagement Director Pablo Hinojosa gives an update on APNIC's activities and new service initiatives at AFRINIC 29 in Hammamet, Tunisia from 26 to 30 November 2018.
Similar to APEC TEL 57: IPv6 deployment update (20)
APNIC Foundation, presented by Ellisha Heppner at the PNG DNS Forum 2024APNIC
Ellisha Heppner, Grant Management Lead, presented an update on APNIC Foundation to the PNG DNS Forum held from 6 to 10 May, 2024 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
Registry Data Accuracy Improvements, presented by Chimi Dorji at SANOG 41 / I...APNIC
Chimi Dorji, Internet Resource Analyst at APNIC, presented on Registry Data Accuracy Improvements at SANOG 41 jointly held with INNOG 7 in Mumbai, India from 25 to 30 April 2024.
APNIC Policy Roundup, presented by Sunny Chendi at the 5th ICANN APAC-TWNIC E...APNIC
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DDoS In Oceania and the Pacific, presented by Dave Phelan at NZNOG 2024APNIC
Dave Phelan, Senior Network Analyst/Technical Trainer at APNIC, presents 'DDoS In Oceania and the Pacific' at NZNOG 2024 held in Nelson, New Zealand from 8 to 12 April 2024.
'Future Evolution of the Internet' delivered by Geoff Huston at Everything Op...APNIC
Geoff Huston, Chief Scientist at APNIC deliver keynote presentation on the 'Future Evolution of the Internet' at the Everything Open 2024 conference in Gladstone, Australia from 16 to 18 April 2024.
IP addressing and IPv6, presented by Paul Wilson at IETF 119APNIC
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draft-harrison-sidrops-manifest-number-01, presented at IETF 119APNIC
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Benefits of doing Internet peering and running an Internet Exchange (IX) pres...APNIC
Che-Hoo Cheng, Senior Director, Development at APNIC presents on the "Benefits of doing Internet peering and running an Internet Exchange (IX)" at the Communications Regulatory Commission of Mongolia's IPv6, IXP, Datacenter - Policy and Regulation International Trends Forum in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia on 7 March 2024
APNIC Update and RIR Policies for ccTLDs, presented at APTLD 85APNIC
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Instagram has become one of the most popular social media platforms, allowing people to share photos, videos, and stories with their followers. Sometimes, though, you might want to view someone's story without them knowing.
Ready to Unlock the Power of Blockchain!Toptal Tech
Imagine a world where data flows freely, yet remains secure. A world where trust is built into the fabric of every transaction. This is the promise of blockchain, a revolutionary technology poised to reshape our digital landscape.
Toptal Tech is at the forefront of this innovation, connecting you with the brightest minds in blockchain development. Together, we can unlock the potential of this transformative technology, building a future of transparency, security, and endless possibilities.
Meet up Milano 14 _ Axpo Italia_ Migration from Mule3 (On-prem) to.pdfFlorence Consulting
Quattordicesimo Meetup di Milano, tenutosi a Milano il 23 Maggio 2024 dalle ore 17:00 alle ore 18:30 in presenza e da remoto.
Abbiamo parlato di come Axpo Italia S.p.A. ha ridotto il technical debt migrando le proprie APIs da Mule 3.9 a Mule 4.4 passando anche da on-premises a CloudHub 1.0.
Gen Z and the marketplaces - let's translate their needsLaura Szabó
The product workshop focused on exploring the requirements of Generation Z in relation to marketplace dynamics. We delved into their specific needs, examined the specifics in their shopping preferences, and analyzed their preferred methods for accessing information and making purchases within a marketplace. Through the study of real-life cases , we tried to gain valuable insights into enhancing the marketplace experience for Generation Z.
The workshop was held on the DMA Conference in Vienna June 2024.
5. The IPv6 economy league table
CC Economy
IPv6 capable
(%)
BE Belgium 58.33
IN India 55.11
US United States 45.02
DE Germany 39.97
GR Greece 39.31
UY Uruguay 36.78
UK
United
Kingdom
29.17
LU Luxembourg 29.12
CH Switzerland 29.01
MY Malaysia 28.39
FI Finland 28.33
CC Economy
IPv6 capable
(%)
BR Brazil 27.96
JP Japan 27.27
IE Ireland 26.18
TT
Trinidad &
Tobago
25.70
FR France 23.70
CA Canada 21.13
EE Estonia 20.55
PT Portugal 19.64
NZ New Zealand 19.11
EC Ecuador 18.71
AU Australia 18.14
6. The IPv6 economy league table
CC Economy
IPv6 capable
(%)
BE Belgium 58.33
IN India 55.11
US United States 45.02
DE Germany 39.97
GR Greece 39.31
UY Uruguay 36.78
UK
United
Kingdom
29.17
LU Luxembourg 29.12
CH Switzerland 29.01
MY Malaysia 28.39
FI Finland 28.33
CC Economy
IPv6 capable
(%)
BR Brazil 27.96
JP Japan 27.27
IE Ireland 26.18
TT
Trinidad &
Tobago
25.70
FR France 23.70
CA Canada 21.13
EE Estonia 20.55
PT Portugal 19.64
NZ New Zealand 19.11
EC Ecuador 18.71
AU Australia 18.14
7. Fast Growth Driven By Single Entity
Australia
IPv6 Capable (%) 18.14
Primary IPv6 Driver Telstra
Korea
IPv6 Capable (%) 8.48
Primary IPv6 Driver SK Telekom
Thailand
IPv6 Capable (%) 10.82
Primary IPv6 Driver AIS
8. • Capability to support growth, IoT, Smart
Cities, future services
• Simplify network design
• Reduce load on CGN
• Lower CAPEX
• Commitment to Internet Tech Evolution
• Government Encouragement
Motivation for Early Market Drivers
9. New Zealand IPv6 End-User Readiness
IPv6 capable = 19.11%
65.74% increase in the last 12 months
15. Observations
• IPv6 end-user readiness is increasing across diverse economy
profiles.
• Once fully enabled, IPv6 usage increases quickly within networks.
• Common trend sees three stages of economy readiness.
• Mobile operators largely responsible for driving large scale uptake.
• Positive signs for future readiness growth, especially as vendor
support grows.
16. Embracing the Digital Future
APEC TEL Strategic Action Plan 2016-2020
Implementation 3: Promote Regional Economic Integration
Objective 3.4: Enhanced Online Connectivity
a) Promote open data in APEC region.
b) Promote development of cross-border e-commerce.
c) Promote the Internet of Things (IoT) and application-to-
application connectivity.
d) Promotion of digital content within the APEC region.
e) Promote greater adoption of IPv6.