North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Definition of P2P (was Feinstein)
Sorry, was it possible to search for a file from > millions of storage nodes in IRC? Bora > -----Original Message----- > From: Dave Dennis [mailto:[email protected]] > Sent: Monday, August 30, 2004 5:04 PM > To: Bora Akyol > Cc: 'Martin J. Levy'; 'Sean Donelan'; [email protected] > Subject: RE: Senator Diane Feinstein Wants to know about the > Benefits of P2P > > > /dcc send <nick> filename > > peer to peer sharing, on irc, since 1991. > > Napster simply implemented the IRC protocol's DCC function, > with a better command set / GUI. > > > > +------------------------- > + Dave Dennis > + Seattle, WA > + [email protected] > + http://www.dmdennis.com > +------------------------- > > On Mon, 30 Aug 2004, Bora Akyol wrote: > > > > > I think we need to define what P2P is before we can address this. > > > > IMHO, P2P started with NAPSTER, yes before that there was > WWW, gopher, > > ftp, > > files by email, bitnet, x/y/z modem, bbs (dating myself here), > > but the large scale bandwidth usage that is seen started > with NAPSTER. > > > > P2P I would define as distributed file sharing with > database like search > > capabilities. If you define it in this context, the bandwidth > > characteristics of P2P is a lot closer (but on a higher > scale) than the > > bandwidth characteristics of a traditional web surfer. > Hence, ADSL in > > particular and asymmetric data comm in general hamper P2P. > > > > > > Bora > > > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > > From: Martin J. Levy [mailto:[email protected]] > > > Sent: Monday, August 30, 2004 4:13 PM > > > To: Sean Donelan > > > Cc: Bora Akyol; [email protected] > > > Subject: RE: Senator Diane Feinstein Wants to know about the > > > Benefits of P2P > > > > > > > > > Sean, > > > > > > >There were lots of FTP mirrors around. > > > >Every Sun workstation could have a Anonymous FTP. Of > > > course, the problem > > > >was every Sun workstation could be an Anonymous FTP :-) > > > > > > ... but you forgot to mention that filtering and firewalls > > > and NAT were not in common use, hence everywhere was > > > accessible from everywhere. P2P was all there was. > > > > > > Martin > > > > > > > >
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