The role of National Strategies in maintaining Competitive Edge in Information and Communication Technologies

This paper examines the economical impact of IPv6, Internet Protocol's next generation. Technically, IPv6 represents an upgrade, an evolution that offers the resources necessary for deeper and wider market penetration of the IP technology, to support the needs of a global economy, to build new...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ciprian Popoviciu, Patrick Grossetete
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Institute of Informatics and Cybernetics 2006-12-01
Series:Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics
Subjects:
ICT
DoC
DoD
Online Access:http://www.iiisci.org/Journal/CV$/sci/pdfs/P563955.pdf
id doaj-62a2c65ad1be4a188943ffc2e1852a2b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-62a2c65ad1be4a188943ffc2e1852a2b2020-11-24T23:08:00ZengInternational Institute of Informatics and CyberneticsJournal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics1690-45242006-12-01469499The role of National Strategies in maintaining Competitive Edge in Information and Communication TechnologiesCiprian Popoviciu0Patrick Grossetete1 Cisco Systems Cisco Systems This paper examines the economical impact of IPv6, Internet Protocol's next generation. Technically, IPv6 represents an upgrade, an evolution that offers the resources necessary for deeper and wider market penetration of the IP technology, to support the needs of a global economy, to build new products and new services. Politically and economically it has the potential of being a quiet revolution. Countries that trailed US into the information revolution recognize this opportunity to take a leading role in its next expansion phase and have developed national strategies to help better position their respective economies. Despite understanding the constraints imposed by the current version of IP, the private sector is currently inclined to largely ignore IPv6 because of its initial deployment costs and long term returns. Forced by high investor expectations to focus exclusively on the immediate bottom line it trades long term growth opportunities for short term benefits revolving around productivity increases. The paper analyses the importance of a National Strategy in driving IPv6 adoption and in closing a widening knowledge and deployment gap between US and countries such as China, Japan, Korea and the EU.http://www.iiisci.org/Journal/CV$/sci/pdfs/P563955.pdf ICTBroadbandIPv6DoCDoDNational Strategy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ciprian Popoviciu
Patrick Grossetete
spellingShingle Ciprian Popoviciu
Patrick Grossetete
The role of National Strategies in maintaining Competitive Edge in Information and Communication Technologies
Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics
ICT
Broadband
IPv6
DoC
DoD
National Strategy
author_facet Ciprian Popoviciu
Patrick Grossetete
author_sort Ciprian Popoviciu
title The role of National Strategies in maintaining Competitive Edge in Information and Communication Technologies
title_short The role of National Strategies in maintaining Competitive Edge in Information and Communication Technologies
title_full The role of National Strategies in maintaining Competitive Edge in Information and Communication Technologies
title_fullStr The role of National Strategies in maintaining Competitive Edge in Information and Communication Technologies
title_full_unstemmed The role of National Strategies in maintaining Competitive Edge in Information and Communication Technologies
title_sort role of national strategies in maintaining competitive edge in information and communication technologies
publisher International Institute of Informatics and Cybernetics
series Journal of Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics
issn 1690-4524
publishDate 2006-12-01
description This paper examines the economical impact of IPv6, Internet Protocol's next generation. Technically, IPv6 represents an upgrade, an evolution that offers the resources necessary for deeper and wider market penetration of the IP technology, to support the needs of a global economy, to build new products and new services. Politically and economically it has the potential of being a quiet revolution. Countries that trailed US into the information revolution recognize this opportunity to take a leading role in its next expansion phase and have developed national strategies to help better position their respective economies. Despite understanding the constraints imposed by the current version of IP, the private sector is currently inclined to largely ignore IPv6 because of its initial deployment costs and long term returns. Forced by high investor expectations to focus exclusively on the immediate bottom line it trades long term growth opportunities for short term benefits revolving around productivity increases. The paper analyses the importance of a National Strategy in driving IPv6 adoption and in closing a widening knowledge and deployment gap between US and countries such as China, Japan, Korea and the EU.
topic ICT
Broadband
IPv6
DoC
DoD
National Strategy
url http://www.iiisci.org/Journal/CV$/sci/pdfs/P563955.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT ciprianpopoviciu theroleofnationalstrategiesinmaintainingcompetitiveedgeininformationandcommunicationtechnologies
AT patrickgrossetete theroleofnationalstrategiesinmaintainingcompetitiveedgeininformationandcommunicationtechnologies
AT ciprianpopoviciu roleofnationalstrategiesinmaintainingcompetitiveedgeininformationandcommunicationtechnologies
AT patrickgrossetete roleofnationalstrategiesinmaintainingcompetitiveedgeininformationandcommunicationtechnologies
_version_ 1725616044807028736