The Washington Post has an article about peer to peer networking. Apparently the military is interested. The article is not technical, but I'm always interested to read anything that departs from the "P2P networks are for pirates" standard entertainment industry line.The U.S. Joint Forces Command last week began testing new commercial software called Groove, developed by the creator of Lotus Notes. About 20 large corporations also are using the program, which allows people to create ad hoc computing groups, send instant messages, mark up files and do other collaborative work online without help from system administrators. Makers of similar "groupware" products got in line this week to take the military up on its appeal for help. Dan Gilmore has a column on this same issue in which he talks with John Robb (ex USAF special operations and now president and COO of Userland software) about how the internet can help our overly centralized leadership meet the highly distributed enemy of today. John Robb expands on the idea at his own website. (links from HTP and scripting news)
It's not just for stealing music and exposing your diary to the world anymore.
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It's not just for stealing music and exposing your diary to the world anymore.
- jim 11-11-2001 5:08 pm