North American IPv4 Addresses Have Run Out

President and CEO of American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN), John Curran, announced the exhaustion of the North American Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) pool.

As we all know, a movement to motivate organizations across the industry to enable and transition to Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) has been underway for several years. Sounds like we might be approaching crunch time. As you may know, many countries have already hit this milestone.*

 

“Technologists have known for years that we would run out of IPv4 addresses, which is why the IPv6 standard was created in the late 1990s. While IPv4 was limited to just about 4 billion addresses, IPv6 will provide 340 undecillion addresses (a one followed by thirty-six zeroes). That’s enough to give 5×1028 addresses to every single person on the planet.” – WIRED

 

Of course, this means that networking engineers will need to continue to develop their IPv6 addressing knowledge and skills. IPv6 is tested in many Cisco Certification Exams, including the entry level ICND1 exam, CCNP Route Exam, CCIE Routing and Switching and many others.

CCNA Security 2.0 Available

Now available, CCNA Security version 2.0 aligning with the newly released Cisco Network Security (IINS) certification exam (210-260). CCNA Routing and Switching topics: Network Topologies and Securing Routing Protocol were added to the course allowing for a smooth transition from the CCENT level directly into CCNA Security. Other new topics introducing Cisco Identify Service Engine (ISE), 802.1x and BYOD, Cloud and virtualization, Cisco Cloud Web Security and Cisco Advanced Malware Protection. Existing content is updated to reflect new security risks, standards and technologies, integration of the new technologies into Cisco Adaptive Security Appliance (ASA), IPS (next-generation IPS), Firewall (next-generation FW), VPNs, End-point Security, and additional practice assessments.