Setting an Example: IPv6 Deployment at the University of Costa Rica

July 30, 2019

Setting an Example: IPv6 Deployment at the University of Costa Rica

The University of Costa Rica (UCR) continues to make progress in their IPv6 deployment plan, which it has been implementing for three and a half years with excellent results.

After investing and training its human resources, the University of Costa Rica upgraded its technological platform to be able to seamlessly deploy IPv6, offer new services and accompany the growth of the Internet. 

Rebeca Esquivel Flores, Coordinator of the Communications Management Department of the University of Costa Rica, highlighted the support they received from LACNIC throughout this process and noted that the transformation as a whole had been extremely positive.

Why did the University of Costa Rica decide to implement a pilot plan for IPv6 deployment?

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We believe that two of the pillars of the University are research and teaching. Many other universities and research centers use IPv6 in their information and technology services, and these are of great value to us. Using IPv6 makes their content more readily accessible. The same goes for the content that students use for their academic work. Many teachers and researchers work on projects together with colleagues in different universities around the country and the world, which is why they use the Red Clara link, and much of this traffic is over IPv6. Students are among the greatest users of RedUCR and they use a number of services and IPv6-compatible content hosted on servers that are part of the network. Equally important is the fact that it has been proven that the use of IPv6 improves users’ browsing experience, especially because it reduces the number of hops required to reach the destination, making data traffic appear to be faster.

The University is also working on a series of innovation projects involving the IoT, for example, the installation of sensors in our own agriculture farms, where we experiment with different irrigation, fertilization and self-growing systems. Every device we connect for these projects requires an IP address, so the lack IPv4 addresses led us to solve this problem by using the IPv6 protocol.

Another thing worth noting is that the University has always been at the forefront of telecommunications, infrastructure, data processing, and the creation of knowledge. So, the implementation of this new protocol represents an improvement on something on which all of these activities are built, namely, RedUCR, the network that transports our data and communications

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