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Microsoft Bing and Xbox.com Support World IPv6 Day

June 8 is just around the corner, and along with other members of the Internet Society (ISOC), Microsoft will participate in World IPv6 Day. (For more information on IPv6, you can Bing it: http://www.bing.com/search?q=ipv6)

On this one-day test, we will provide support for IPv6 on Bing.com and Xbox.com as part of a broad industry effort to validate the readiness of this new foundation of the Internet. Consumers with IPv6 Internet capabilities – with both a device that supports IPv6 (like a Windows 7 PC) and support from your Internet provider – will automatically utilize IPv6 when connected to participating website. While the protocols are different, the browsing experiences of IPv4 and IPv6 are identical. In fact, most users of these services won’t even notice that this test is happening. Users with only IPv4 connectivity will continue to connect via IPv4.

The Internet is gradually shifting to IPv6, representing a foundational shift in every Internet experience. At Microsoft, we have been working towards the promise of a smooth and prudent transition, and teams across the company have been readying our products and services to support IPv6. Many of our products, like Microsoft Windows, have had robust IPv6 support for years. Microsoft takes this transition very seriously, and this test is one of many investments to ensure there is no interruption of service for our users as IPv6 is widely deployed.

As noted, most people will be fine on World IPv6 Day.  As noted on the Windows IPv6 blog, some users with a misconfigured Internet connection may lose network connectivity when accessing web sites that support dual IPv4 and IPv6 connectivity. Knowledge Base article 2533454 repairs configurations where you have may appear to have IPv6 connectivity to the Internet, but it is not working properly. The post also provides a link to the test (included below) that can help you understand whether you will be negatively affected, as well as whether you have IPv6 web access.

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You can learn more about Microsoft’s support for IPv6 at http://www.microsoft.com/ipv6.

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Announcements: Supporting the next version of the Internet with IPv6 SP1

In my job at Microsoft, I worry about lots of things, not the least of which is where I parked my car this morning.MP900411803[1]

I worry about Russia’s move to abolish Daylight Saving Time, where to eat in Las Vegas, and the transition to ipv6. (Of course, our other announcement today eliminating the clock from the Windows OS should address the challenges of ever shifting DST scheduled and time zones.)

I recall a great headline last year from the good folks at ZDNet: IPv6: The end of the Internet as we know it (and I feel fine). Paraphrasing a classic REM song is fine, but in the views of some, IPv6 is not 2012. (With a nod to the Mayan calendar, which ends or renews — depending on your side of the debate — December 21, 2012, when a new Mayan Calendar count begins.) These make for great headlines. But many companies – including Microsoft – have been working on the transition to IPv6 for several years. Like any change, it’s always good to review where you and your industry is when it comes to migrating to a new technology or system.

Although IPv6 is designed to solve many of the problems of the current version of the IP (IPv4), we believe that this should be enough IP addresses for a few more years. Although IPv6 provides improved security, autoconfiguration, and extensibility, we know that a limited number of companies are reluctant to support the first release of a new product, and often wait for Service Pack 1 to be released.

So today, we are happy to announce the next move to the Internet Protocol, IPv6 SP1, the first sustained engineering service pack update to IPv6.

This innovative and just plain one better service pack will provide improved business value, ease of use and an incentive for customers to migrate to the next generation of the Internet. Its use will also expand the capabilities of the Internet and enable a variety of valuable and exciting scenarios. Realizing far too late that eventually these IPv4 addresses would be exhausted, Internet Protocol version six (IPv6) was mapped out in the 1990’s and then published in 1998 as the next step in IP.  IPv6 is 128-bit, which provides support for many more devices. 3.4 to the 128th, to be exact, or 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456 IP addresses. IPv6.1 further embraces the move to social networking and the cloud by adding support for roughly twice as many addresses (2 to the 129th IP addresses – or 680,564,733,841,876,926,926,749,214,863,536,422,912) by allowing emoticon suffixes to the current set supported in IPv6.

There has been tremendous support in the marketplace for the announcement of IPv6.1.  Industry visionary Dan Jump, CEO of Contoso gave his early endorsement to the coming service pack at a joint press conference today. "Just as we’ve supported virtually every product and service Microsoft has ever brought to market, we’ve also been early testers on SP1 for IPv6. With this new release, we’ve been very happy in the support we’ve received from Microsoft. The entire Contoso family – with the exception of former CIO Albert V. Leems – are excited to see this next step in Internet. I’m personally excited to see where I’ll keep all of my new 428 octillion Internet enabled devices."

(In a separate announcement, Contoso announced that Mr. Leems announced has decided to leave the company effective immediately "to spend more time with his family.")

Please note that build-to-build upgrades for the IPv6.1 beta, Release Candidate (RC) or Release to Manufacturing (RTM) will be supported. If you have installed the beta or RC of SP1, you must uninstall it first and then install the RTM of IPv6.1. Please note that IPv6.1 will not support certain alphanumerical URL key combinations and automatically redirect users to an appropriate forwarding address.

We expect that IPv6.1 will be issued about 12 months after IPv6 day, June 8, 2011.

Tags: Windows, Microsoft, IPv6, IPv4

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Post: Configuring IPv6 addresses on Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008

Of interest is Rand Morimoto post today on IPv6 Static Addressing and DNSv6, with details on configuring IPv6 addresses on Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008. In this blog post, Rand covers…

  • How to statically address a Windows 2008 / Windows 2008 R2 Server
  • How to statically address a Windows 7 Client System
  • How to setup DNS for IPv6 on a Windows 2008 R2 Server to do name resolution of IPv6 systems

 

Tags: Windows, Microsoft, IPv6, IPv4, Windows 7, Windows Server 2008

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Bing to support the next generation of the Internet on World IPv6 Day

imageAs noted in my post "The Transition to IPv6 is not the End of the World. No, Really." the way numbering and identifying Internet connected devices – or IP addresses – is done is changing from the current IPv4, and we will soon be adding more through the change to IPv6.  The transition to IPv6 is not a surprise to communications and Internet Service Providers (like AT&T, Sprint, Comcast, Time Warner and others), network infrastructure companies (like Cisco and Juniper), large multinational companies, or companies like Microsoft.

As one example in support of the change, today the Bing team World IPv6 Day: Bing taking decisions to the next generation of the Internet

"Microsoft and other major technology companies have been working behind the scenes for years to outline a clear path to the next generation Internet Protocol, IPv6. Although a complete migration will take years, we are hopeful that the vast majority of people will never notice the transition.

"Microsoft has worked as a member of Internet Society (ISOC) – and more generally the Internet community – to invest in and ensure that there is a seamless transition from IPv4 to IPv6. It is especially important for Microsoft’s online services like Bing to be prepared. For this reason, Bing is joining other major websites in “World IPv6 Day” on June 8, 2011 as part of the Internet Society’s effort to validate the readiness of IPv6 as new foundation of the Internet.

"On June 8, we will enable world-wide IPv6 connectivity to Bing.com, for the purposes of a one-day test. Consumers with IPv6 Internet capabilities will automatically access this new method of connectivity. This necessitates both a device that supports IPv6 (like a Windows 7 PC), and support from your Internet provider.

"IPv4 traffic will continue to connect to Bing without any change. In fact, most Bing users won’t even notice that this transition is occurring."

As noted in my previous posts on IPv6, Microsoft has been working on our products and services to support IPv6. Microsoft maintains the Microsoft IPv6 information site on TechNet to provide more information on this new IP. There you can read more about how we’ve already built IPv6 support into the latest versions of Microsoft Windows, including Windows 7, Windows Server 2008 R2, and even in older versions such as Windows Vista, Windows Server 2003, and even Windows XP and Windows CE .NET. We offer overviews of IPv6, technical information, deployment and developer resources, including an overview of Teredo, the Microsoft platform that provides IPv6 connectivity across the current IPv4 Internet.

 

Tags: Windows, Microsoft, IPv6, IPv4

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With IPv6, where will you keep your 428 octillion Internet enabled devices?

Today we were discussing the transition from IPv4 to IPv6 that I noted yesterday. To me, one of the amazing numbers in this effort are the number of IP addresses that IPv6 enables, as I noted in the post…

Realizing that eventually these IPv4 addresses would be exhausted, Internet Protocol version six (IPv6) was mapped out in the 1990’s and then published in 1998 as the next step in IP.  IPv6 is 128-bit, which provides support for many more devices. 3.4 to the 128th, to be exact, or 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456 IP addresses. That should be enough for a few more years.

So I thought: how many IPv6 devices would that be for every person on the planet today. Assuming 7 billion people, I believe that equates to be approximately 428 octillion (or 428 billion billion billion, 4.28×1028).

Or in other words, IPv6 is enough for everyone to have 428 octillion IP enabled devices.

Please note that math was not my major and subject to correction. 😉

 

Tags: Windows, Microsoft, IPv6, IPv4

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