BT is teaming up with Microsoft to trial an IPv6 network, the
next-generation Internet protocol which will create an infinite
number of new Web addresses.
The current Internet protocol, IPv4, has a capacity limited to
four billion Internet addresses, making it difficult to add users
or new devices to the Internet. IPv6 will create increased
address space, ensuring Internet growth.
BT will use the free trial, open to all interested parties, to
test connectivity and services around the new protocol.
Microsoft Research will provide IPv6 software for Windows
2000 servers for use in the trial network.
Stewart Davies, director of advanced communications
engineering at BT, said: “Mobile internet applications and new
generations of mobile phones and personal organisers will
stimulate demand for huge numbers of extra IP addresses —
far more than the original IPv4 protocol can provide.
“IPv6 makes that massive growth possible by creating
enough addresses for every person and machine on the
planet many times over.”
According to BT, the new protocol will have new security
standards which will boost the prospects for ebusiness. It will
also differentiate between traffic types of different urgencies
such as non urgent emails and highly urgent realtime video
conferences.
Derek McAuley, assistant director of Microsoft Research,
said: “Microsoft Research has been working with IPv6 for
more than three years to ensure that, as the v6 standards,
technology and services mature, Microsoft is ready to
respond to the customers needs for IPv6 platforms.”
BT and Microsoft are both founding members of the IPv6
Forum, a worldwide consortium aimed at promoting the new
protocol. The Forum had 60 members at the end of last year.
Yesterday, business information group Informa announced it
had been chosen by the IPv6 Forum to promote IPv6. The
company will organise conferences in 2000 and 2001 to
promote the new protocol.