Welcome to APRICOT 2016
Haere mai. Kia ora koutou. Welcome to APRICOT 2016. We hope you have a great week in Auckland, New Zealand!
Haere mai. Kia ora koutou. Welcome to APRICOT 2016. We hope you have a great week in Auckland, New Zealand!
Geoff Huston participated at the recent NANOG 66 conference and CAIDA Active Internet Measurement Systems (AIMS) workshop.
Guest Post: Eric Vyncke discusses his IETF document RFC 7404 – Using Only Link-Local Addressing inside an IPv6 Network which describes the use of LLAs for links between routers in an IPv6 network.
Guest Post: Anurag Bhatia from Hurricane Electric provides his account of SANOG 27, held recently in Kathmandu, Nepal.
The countdown to APRICOT 2016 is on – what sessions are you looking forward to?
Register before 24 February to take advantage of the Early Bird rate for the Routing Workshop in Pekanbaru, Indonesia.
Geoff Huston discusses why an analysis and forecasting of BGP can be useful for folk in the Internet business, with predictions for IPv4 and IPv6 BGP Tables Sizes for the next 5 years.
Geoff Huston examines IP packet fragmentation in detail looking at the design choices made by IPv4 and IPv6.
Let’s see what has changed in the past 12 months in addressing the Internet, and look at how IP address allocation information can inform us of the changing nature of the network itself.
Before IPv6 can ‘just work’ for Internet users, ISPs and software developers often have legacy technology challenges to overcome at the back end.