D Chauhan, S Sharma - Int. J. Electron. Ind. Eng.(IJEEE), ISSN, 2014 - academia.edu
IPv4 is the most dominant addressing protocol used on the Internet and most private networks today. With the advent of wide variety of devices and upcoming technologies, the …
IPv6 is coming, whether we like it or not. It isn't a matter of new features or" killer applications," although those may come with time. Rather, it is the rapid depletion of the …
On 14 September 2012 last block of IPv4 has been allocated from the Regional Internet Register (RIR) across the Europe, Middle East and Asia. In addition, the demand of further …
B Childress, B Cathey, S Dixon - Journal of Computing Sciences in …, 2003 - dl.acm.org
There is no question the Internet has revolutionalized the world. Many of the things we take for granted today were not even possible a few years ago. Will the Internet continue to push …
The Internet is changing-as it has to, because IPv4 does not support enough addresses for everyone alive today, let alone proliferating embedded and mobile devices. This paper …
MM Alhassoun, SR Alghunaim - International Journal of …, 2016 - search.proquest.com
The next-generation Internet protocol (IPv6) was designed to overcome the limitation in IPv4 by using a 128-bit address instead of a 32-bit address. In addition to solving the address the …
S Ashraf, D Muhammad, Z Aslam - J. Ilm. Tek. Elektro Komput. Dan …, 2020 - eprints.uad.ac.id
The exponential expansion of the Internet has exhausted the IPv4 addresses provided by IANA. The new IP edition, ie, IPv6 introduced by IETF with new features such as a simplified …