| Publisher | IBM | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Format | 355.5KB PDF, requires Acrobat Rdr 5 | Date added | 24 Jul 2002 |
| Topics | IP Technologies, File and Network Servers | ||
| Downloads | 4 | ||
Content distribution networks have become widespread in the current IPv4-based Internet, and request-routing in CDNs today are primarily based on DNS mechanisms. This paper considers request-routing in CDNs as and when IPv6 networks begin to be deployed. Unlike IPv4, IPv6 includes explicit support for host mobility. This paper illustrates that packet routing to and from mobile hosts has a strong conceptual similarity with wide-area request routing in CDNs.
Related white papers
IP Telephony from A to Z
Making the decision to switch to IP telephony and deploying the system is no small task. But help is here. Download this complementary e-book to assist you with your pre-decision...
Strategic Guide to Business Phone Systems:
This 32 page eBook was created to help you understand the key issues involved in choosing and deploying the best UC system for your organization. This guide takes you through...
Work Smarter with Telephony Integration and Unified Communications and Collaboration Solutions from IBM
In a rapidly changing world economy, organizations need to become more efficient, more innovative, and more responsive to their customers -- all the while reducing telephony and collaboration costs. Keeping...
People + Processes + Technology: Creating a Winning Formula for Customer Support
You might have the world's best support professionals or the most sophisticated technologies - but if you don't effectively combine the two, your service and support will be run-of-the-mill or...
Cash In Your PBX -- Upgrade with Cisco. Gain significant new savings now
PBX systems and old telephony applications were just not built for today's business needs. They don't scale easily, struggle to support mobility, and are increasingly expensive to maintain. Now you...
Unified Communications
Waiting for information via email is no longer acceptable. Today's communication channels must deliver immediate presence and interaction. Successful companies know this and are responding by turning to UC.
An Enhanced Security Protocol for Fast Mobile IPv6
Off late, Kempf and Koodli have proposed a security protocol for Fast Mobile IPv6 (FMIPv6). Through the SEcure Neighbor Discovery (SEND) protocol, it achieves secure distribution of a handover key,...




