Tag Archive for Japan

Happy Birthday to IPv6

Happy Birthday to IPv6You are forgiven if you missed IPv6’s birthday (I did). The next-generation network addressing scheme turned 6 years old back in June. June 06, 2012, was World IPv6 Launch Day when everybody was supposed to permanently enable IPv6 on their networks. The results – not so good. There are global highlights but 3/4’s of internet users still regularly connect to the Intertubes over legacy IPv4.

The Internet Society rightly points out that enterprise operations tend to be the “elephant in the room” when it comes to IPv6 deployment. If only 26% of networks advertise IPv6 autonomous system prefixes, 74% do not. Most of the 3/4ths not using IPv6 are likely to be enterprise networks.

Enterprises have traditionally been reluctant to embrace IPv6 — there has been no real need to implement it, with many seeing it as an additional cost and risk with no direct use for their daily business.  Cost can include monetary assets, but also people and time

IPv6Migrating to IPv6 will be hard. The migration will involve all departments of the organization and every piece of equipment connected to the network. Then consider that the migration will be made over time and that everyone needs to be on the same page working together for the best outcome and smoothest transition.

Legacy systems can be defined basically as older systems. They likely are missing some common functionality from current technology, but still exist because they perform a key or important function for the organization just fine, thus there is no reason to replace it. However, this attitude is starting to change.

Microsoft logoLarger and more tech-savvy enterprises are forging innovative paths forward. CircleID points out Microsoft (MSFT), which made one of the first publicly announced purchases of IPv4 address space, reportedly purchasing 666,000 addresses at $11.25 per address in 2011. In a recent blog, Microsoft described the steps is taking to turn off IPv4 and become an IPv6-only company. Their description of their heavily translated IPv4 network includes phrases like “potentially fragile”, and “operationally challenging”, and about dual-stack operations, “complex”.

Outside of the enterprise space, there’s still the rest of the Internet that needs to make the migration. According to the stats in the article, the top carriers in the U.S. still carry less than half of the IPv6 traffic that the Indian ISP Reliance Jio carries. The Internet Society takes the happy view that the excuse that “no one is doing IPv6” is gone. For many people and networks, IPv6 is the new normal and is the future of Internet connectivity.

Some of the highlights for IPv6 are:

  • 237 million people in India connect over IPv6.
  • Mobile operators are adopting IPv6, some have over 80 or 90% of their devices connecting over IPv6.
  • 28% of the Alexa Top 1000 websites are IPv6-enabled.

ISOC - State of IPv6 Deployment 2018

 

National mobile networks are driving the global adoption of IPv6. Some mobile networks are taking the step to run IPv6-only to simplify network operations and cut costs. Japan and India are leaders in IPv6 adoption.

Reliance JIOThe Indian wireless carrier Reliance Jio has an 87% IPv6 rate.

In Japan, the top three wireless carriers are:

U.S. wireless carriers are deploying IPv6 also:

Many home and business users get Internet connectivity from broadband ISPs. Many broadband ISPs have deployed IPv6 on their networks. They send the majority of their traffic over IPv6 to major content providers. For example, Comcast (CMCSA), the largest broadband ISP in the U.S. is actively deploying IPv6. Per the World IPv6 Launch website, Comcast has an IPv6 deployment measurement of over 66%. Globally broadband ISPs are also deploying IPv6.

The following table from the Internet Society lists the top IPv6 carriers based on the number of users.

RankISPCountryIPv6 Users (estimated)
1Reliance JioIndia237,600,764
2ComcastUnited States36,114,435
3AT&TUnited States22,305,974
4Vodafone IndiaIndia18,368,165
5Verizon WirelessUnited States15,422,684
6Idea CellularIndia14,681,694
7Deutsche Telekom AGGermany14,261,836
8T-Mobile USAUnited States14,057,105
9KDDI CorporationJapan11.871,952
10Sky BroadbandGreat Britian11,829,610
11ClaroBrazil10,235,805
12SoftbankJapan8,613,145
13OrangeFrance7,924,119
14AT&T WirelessUnited States7,694,881
15Cox CommunicationsUnited States6,316,462
16Kabel DeutschlandGermany5,835,590
17SK TelecomKorea5,764,073
18NTT CommunicationsJapan5,596,206

 

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Urban Mining

Urban MiningProblems with Chinese supplies of rare earths have sent the Japanese in search of alternative sources. The search has created opportunities in what Japan refers to as urban mining. The New York Times reports that Kosaka Japan, a town of 6,000 is a leader in urban mining. Urban mining is recycling valuable metals and minerals from the country’s huge stockpiles of used electronics like cellphones and computers. “We’ve literally discovered gold in cellphones,” Tetsuzo Fuyushiba, a former land minister told the NYT.

Why urban mining

Kosaka’s pursuits have become especially important for Japan since China recently started to block exports of all rare earths to Japan, the NYT reports. This has caused concerns at Japanese manufacturers, from Toyota to tiny electronics makers. The raw materials are crucial to products as diverse as hybrid electric cars, wind turbines, and computer display screens. In Kosaka, Dowa Holdings (DWMNF) which has mined the area from 1884 until 1990, has built a recycling plant. The 200-foot-tall recycling furnace renders old electronics parts into what the NYT describes as a molten stew. From the stew, valuable metals and other minerals are extracted. The salvaged parts come from around Japan and overseas, including the United States.

Dowa’s subsidiary, Kosaka Smelting and Refining, has so far successfully reclaimed gold and rare metals. They have recovered indium, used in liquid-crystal display screens, and antimony, used in silicon wafers for semiconductors. The New York Times reports that the company is trying to develop ways to reclaim the harder-to-mine minerals.

The hard to mine minerals include rare earths — like neodymium, a vital element in industrial batteries used in electric motors, and dysprosium, used in laser materials. The National Institute for Materials Science, says that used electronics in Japan hold an estimated 300,000 tons of rare earths. That amount is tiny compared to reserves in China. China mines 93 percent of the world’s rare earth minerals, Tapping these urban mines could help reduce Japan’s dependence on its neighbor, analysts say.

Expensive and technically difficult

Dowa has emerged as the field’s early leader. “It is important for Japan to actively tap its urban mines,” said Kohmei Harada, a managing director at the National Institute of Materials Science told the NYT.  Apart from rare metals and earths, Mr. Harada estimates that about 6,800 tons of gold, or the equivalent of about 16 percent of the total reserves in the world’s gold mines, lie in used electronics in Japan. “Japan’s economy has grown by gathering resources from around the world, and those resources are still with us, in one form or another,” he said.

But this form of recycling is an expensive and technically difficult process. It is still being perfected. At Dowa’s plant, computer chips and other vital parts from electronics are hacked into two-centimeter squares. This feedstock is smelted in a furnace that reaches 1,400 degrees Celsius before various minerals are extracted. The factory processes 300 tons of materials a day. Each ton yields only about 150 grams of rare metals.

Urban mining cell phone speakers

Dowa has turned its attention to developing ways to render neodymium, which is used in powerful magnets. Its extraction has proved costly. Neodymium is found in tiny quantities in the speakers of cellphones. That makes it a challenge to collect meaningful amounts, said Utaro Sekiya, the manager of Dowa’s recycling plant. Finding enough electronics parts to recycle has also grown more difficult for Dowa, which procures used gadgets from around the world. A growing number of countries, including the United States, are recognizing the value of holding onto old electronics. And China already bans the export of used computer motherboards and other discarded electronics parts.

China’s hoarding of rare earths

The global rare earth market is small by mining standards, just $1.5 billion in 2009. However, their value is rising as prices have surged in response to Chinese restrictions on exports. The NYT says that concern over China’s hoarding of rare earths has also been spreading to the United States. In late September 2010, the House of Representatives approved  H.R. 6160, the Rare Earths and Critical Materials Revitalization Act of 2010.

The bill authorized research to address the supply of rare earth minerals, which are vital to applications in fields such as energy, military, electronic, and manufacturing technologies.“We must take steps to recapture our technological lead in a wide range of industries critical to our economic health, our national defense, and a clean and secure energy future,” said Committee on Science and Technology Chairman Bart Gordon (D-TN).

Rare Metals Perodic Table

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The late Chinese patriarch Deng Xiaoping is famously quoted as, “The Middle East has oil, and China has rare earths.”  Japanese companies are the first to become painfully aware of the risks of relying so greatly on China for strategic metals, they have the advantage of history. The Japanese industry base took the oil shocks of the 1970s helped eventually make Japan a leader in fuel-efficiency technologies. Hopefully, the U.S. can see the parallels with what much of the world will be facing with respect to accessing crucial oil supplies in the years ahead.

As global demand for oil in Saudi Arabia grows, there is less oil available for them to export. Saudi Arabian oil demand is expected to grow by 250% over the next two decades according to reports. That means less and less oil for those countries depending on exports from the Middle East. And with China aggressively locking up tens of billions of dollars of oil reserves everywhere on the globe there are going to be few opportunities to find new reserves outside of Saudi Arabia as well.

The electronics recycling project is one example of the Japanese adapting. Maybe someone in the new republican U.S. government will wake up and start a similar project.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Steve Jobs – Ninja?

Steve Jobs - Ninja? Apple CEO Steve Jobs was at the heart of another wild rumor circulating on the inter-tubes. This rumor claims the Apple boss was stopped at Japan’s Kansai International Airport for carrying ninja stars in his carry-on luggage. Rumor has it Mr. Jobs was stopped when he about to board a private plane in late July. Apple officials disputed the claims from SPA! magazine in an article on Bloomberg.

Taiwanese agency Next Media Animation, has created more “proof” of the alleged incident. The Apple-related tabloid provided the following animation.

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After all, if it’s on the inter-tubes it’s got to be true!

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Floppy Disks Fades

Floppy Disks FadesTechCrunch is reporting that Sony will stop making floppy disks in March 2011. According to the article,  Sony (6758) is actually still making and selling those discs. But soon it’s time to say goodbye. The company said [JP] it will stop production in March 2012. Sony rolled out the world’s first 3.5-inch floppy disc back in 1981. Even in 2008, the company could still sell 8.5 million units in Japan alone.

Floppy Disks FadesTechChrunch says “Not too surprisingly, Sony cites rapidly plunging demand as the reason” Floppy disk (demand peaked in 1995 and has shrunk more than 90% since. Hitachi Maxell and Mitsubishi Kagaku Media, two other major makers, withdrew from floppy disc sales in the spring of 2009.

Quietly, Sony wrapped up international sales of floppy discs last month. The exception was India and a few other parts of the world. The company already stopped producing floppy disc drives last September.

For the youngsters – here is what a floppy drive is

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.