[…] junija v Tehnološkem parku Ljubljana – Brdo z začetkom ob 8.30 in bo tematsko nadaljeval IPv6 summit, ki bo dan predtem v istih prostorih. SINOG 2.0 bo obravnaval novosti na področju razvoja […]
[…] The 10th Slovenian IPv6 summit, held on 9 June 2015, attracted around 120 attendees – an impressive number for a country with only 2 million people. Of course, the agenda was packed with good content – Fernando Gont opened the meeting with a keynote on generic IPv6 security and some myths around that and he also closed the meeting with a presentation about his findings and tests around “IPv6 Extension Headers in the wild” and how they are filtered on the Internet. […]
[…] The 10th Slovenian IPv6 summit, held on 9 June 2015, attracted around 120 attendees – an impressive number for a country with only 2 million people. Of course, the agenda was packed with good content – Fernando Gont opened the meeting with a keynote on generic IPv6 security and some myths around that and he also closed the meeting with a presentation about his findings and tests around “IPv6 Extension Headers in the wild” and how they are filtered on the Internet. […]
[…] junija v Tehnološkem parku Ljubljana – Brdo z začetkom ob 8.30 in bo tematsko nadaljeval IPv6 summit, ki bo dan predtem v istih prostorih. SINOG 2.0 bo obravnaval novosti na področju razvoja […]
[…] 10. IPv6 summit […]
[…] 10th Slovenian IPv6 summit and SINOG2 meeting are happening on 9th and 10th of June in Tehnološki Park Ljubljana. Two days […]
[…] 10th Slovenian IPv6 summit and SINOG2 meeting are happening on 9th and 10th of June in Tehnološki Park Ljubljana. Two days of […]
[…] The 10th Slovenian IPv6 summit, held on 9 June 2015, attracted around 120 attendees – an impressive number for a country with only 2 million people. Of course, the agenda was packed with good content – Fernando Gont opened the meeting with a keynote on generic IPv6 security and some myths around that and he also closed the meeting with a presentation about his findings and tests around “IPv6 Extension Headers in the wild” and how they are filtered on the Internet. […]
[…] The 10th Slovenian IPv6 summit, held on 9 June 2015, attracted around 120 attendees – an impressive number for a country with only 2 million people. Of course, the agenda was packed with good content – Fernando Gont opened the meeting with a keynote on generic IPv6 security and some myths around that and he also closed the meeting with a presentation about his findings and tests around “IPv6 Extension Headers in the wild” and how they are filtered on the Internet. […]