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Re: Stanford Networking Seminar, Thu 11/2: Mark Gritter (fwd)
- To: <ietf-extproxy@imc.org>,<cdn@ops.ietf.org>
- Subject: Re: Stanford Networking Seminar, Thu 11/2: Mark Gritter (fwd)
- From: "Hilarie Orman" <HORMAN@novell.com>
- Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 15:32:11 -0700
- Delivery-date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 14:36:12 -0800
- Envelope-to: cdn-data@psg.com
There's a lot of this churning about. Another approach is to
generalize DNS to handle resolution via content regions.
There's that great line in The Loved One "there's got to
be a way to get those stiffs off my property" that inspires
me to think on this All Hallow's Eve,
"there's got to be a way to get names separated from
addresses."
Hilarie
>>> Fred Douglis <douglis@research.att.com> 10/30/00 12:32PM >>>
This might interest anyone who is nearby enough to attend.
------- Forwarded Message
Date: Thu, 26 Oct 2000 15:06:06 -0700
From: Petros Maniatis <maniatis@cs.stanford.edu>
To: colloq@cs.stanford.edu, netseminar@lists.Stanford.EDU
Subject: Stanford Networking Seminar, Thu 11/2: Mark Gritter
Stanford Networking Seminar
When: 12:15PM, Thursday, November 2, 2000
Where: Room 104, Gates Computer Science Building
URL: http://netseminar.stanford.edu/
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Title : An Architecture for Content Routing Support in the Internet
Speaker : Mark Gritter, Computer Science Department,
Stanford University
Abstract:
The primary use of the Internet is content distribution: delivery of web
pages, audio, and video streams to client browsers. Yet the Internet was
never architected for scalable content delivery. The results has been a
proliferation of proprietary protocols and ad hoc mechanism to meet the
growing content demand.
As part of the TRIAD architecture, we introduce an explicit content
layer as a natural extension of current Internet directory and routing
system. Using name-based routing, content requests can be efficiently
directed at the closest replica server, without the need for a
centralized DNS service.
Bio :
Mark Gritter is a PhD student, working with David Cheriton in the
Distributed Systems Group at Stanford University.
Note :
Lunch (but no drinks) is provided for the attendees at 12:15. The talk
itself begins at 12:45.
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