[102998] in North American Network Operators' Group

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Re: IPv6 on SOHO routers?

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (GIULIANO (UOL))
Wed Mar 12 17:39:33 2008

Date: Wed, 12 Mar 2008 18:30:56 -0300
From: "GIULIANO (UOL)" <giulianocm@uol.com.br>
Reply-To: giulianocm@uol.com.br
To: frnkblk@iname.com
CC: nanog@merit.edu
In-Reply-To: <!&!AAAAAAAAAAAuAAAAAAAAAKTyXRN5/+lGvU59a+P7CFMBAN6gY+ZG84BMpVQcAbDh1IQAAAATbSgAABAAAADQFKGbhWNESazlCuo6mXVAAQAAAAA=@iname.com>
Errors-To: owner-nanog@merit.edu


Frank,

Juniper Networks Does support IPv6 in J-Series Routers and SSG Firewalls:


http://www.juniper.net/products_and_services/j_series_services_routers/

http://www.juniper.net/products_and_services/ex_series/index.html

http://www.juniper.net/products_and_services/firewall_slash_ipsec_vpn/index.html

http://www.juniper.net/federal/IPv6/


SSG-5 and SSG-20 does support it after Screenos 6.1 ... for small office 
business.


Other vendor like Fortinet is supporting IPv6 in SOHO equipment too.


Att,


Giuliano



> Slightly off-topic, but tangentially related that I'll dare to ask.
> 
> I'm attending an "Emerging Communications" course where the instructor
> stated that there are SOHO routers that natively support IPv6, pointing to
> Asia specifically.
> 
> Do Linksys, D-Link, Netgear, etc. have such software for the Asian markets?
> 
> Furthermore, he stated that networking equipment companies like Cisco will
> be moving away from IPv4 in 5 years or so.  This is the first time I've
> heard this posited -- I had a hard believing that, but he claims it with
> some authority.  Anyone hear anything like this?  My own opinion is that
> we'll see dual-stack for at least a decade or two to come.
> 
> Frank
> 
> 
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