
Cyberspace almost full
It is brimming with more than 4.29 billion websites and addresses for networks, mobile phones, refrigerators and, of course, personal computers at home and at work.
The internet
As with anything that exists on the internet, anything connected to the internet and anything transported across the internet, an address is required - called an IP (internet protocol) address - that acts like a phone number, allowing every individual device, piece of data or location to be found in the digital labyrinth.
"Of course, they couldn't have predicted what would happen with mobile phones and VoIP and social networking, or that we'd use up addresses as fast as we have."
Mr Biber says that though the IPv6 Forum has been working on the transition for more than a decade, businesses around the globe have been reticent - until now - to exploit their efforts.
Breakdown is inevitable
A breakdown is inevitable. It won't be immediate and it won't be dramatic but it will happen, slowly and subtly, as little bits, mostly the newer IPv6 bits of the internet, fail to appear to anyone still using IPv4 architecture.
The IPv4 internet and all the devices and sites we're accessing now will still work exactly as they do now but when IPv6 devices and sites start appearing online, the existing IPv4 infrastructure simply won't be capable of recognising them and small, random pockets of the new internet will be inaccessible by older hand-helds, routers, modems, servers and operating systems.
The internet and
Nobody owns the internet and, technically, nobody runs it. It is a hotch-potch collection of billions of networks and connections and machines all based loosely on protocols defined by ad hoc bodies with no official power to do anything, really.
That means all internet users have to take matters into their own hands and upgrade their own points of connection - from the ISPs who need to upgrade their servers to host IPv6-compatible websites and the vendors who need to upgrade their mobile handsets, to mums and dads who may require new modems, wireless routers and IPv6-compatible mobile handsets.
"There are a number of ways to calculate the transitional costs for IPv6," Mr Huston says. "One way is to take the internet's 1.7 billion users globally and guesstimate about $100 per user for new hardware, which adds to $170 billion.
Anyone purchasing new hardware or software that has any sort of internet connection should ask if it is v6-capable, because most modems and routers on the market are not and those devices that are can be costly.
Similarly, anyone signing up for a new internet or mobile phone plan, particularly the two-year plans, should ask the same questions.
Is your new hardware (back-end and the devices being deployed in your home or business) IPv6-capable and, if not, will it be upgraded - and at what cost to you?
"I'm confident that the basic IPv6 protocol will still be around in 20 years, though I think the internet will be quite different."
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