You are using IPv4 from 216.73.217.61
Main Headlines
New IPv6 Book "IPv6 for All"
Enable project releases Mobility publication
The Choice: IPv4 Exhaustion or Transition to IPv6
Consulintel: logos
 
SEARCH
Are you a...?
> ISP
Keep informed, visit our
Tell us your thoughts
on IPv6 > POLL
Looking for an
IPv6 Task Force? >
Questions? > FAQS
Jump to PROJECTS
Next EVENTS
000 members
038 guests
LOGIN 
Password 
Not member yet?
Get "extras". Register
Search Bar Plug-in
Firefox      IE7
Other News
(Oct 22, 2003)
(Oct 21, 2003)
(Oct 21, 2003)
(Oct 21, 2003)
(Oct 21, 2003)
(Oct 21, 2003)
(Oct 20, 2003)
(Oct 20, 2003)
(Oct 18, 2003)
(Oct 18, 2003)
(Oct 18, 2003)
(Oct 15, 2003)
DoD begins two weeks of IPv6 interoperability tests
Posted by: Jordi on Monday, October 20, 2003 - 03:26 PM
(221140 Reads) comments? Send this story to a friend Printer friendly page
The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) will explain in a Web conference later Friday why migrating the Internet's infrastructure to IPv6 (Internet Protocol version 6) is critical for the nation's defense, and will present its plans for a two-week test program called Moon which will examine interoperability of IPv6 equipment, software and services.
While governments and network operators in Europe and Asia have been conducting large-scale tests of IPv6 for the last three years, the U.S. response to IPv6 has been "lackluster," according to the Web site of Moon's organizers. And the country is still playing catch-up: The tests the DOD will present originally were due to begin on Oct. 3 and finish Friday, but have not yet begun, according to information provided by the organizers.

Participants in the Moon tests include the DOD, the Interoperability Laboratory of the University of New Hampshire, the North American IPv6 Task Force, networking software and equipment vendors including IBM Corp., Microsoft Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co., Cisco Systems Inc., Fujitsu Ltd., Sun Microsystems Inc. and Nokia Corp., and the Japanese network operator Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp. (NTT)., according to an invitation to attend a news conference about the tests. Click here to read the complete article.