Slashdot Mirror


Public Software Fund's First Project

Russ Nelson writes "The Public Software Fund's first project has been funded for two months worth of development. Tom Jennings (of Fidonet fame) will be writing software to do peer-to-peer file sharing of free software RPM packages, improving the existing free software packages up2date, /current/, and BitTorrent. This will keep new distro releases from being slashdotted."

4 of 145 comments (clear)

  1. flash crowd? by ceejayoz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The "slashdotted" link has an interesting link about another name for the /. effect... the "flash crowd"

    Larry Niven's 1973 SF short story "Flash Crowd" predicted that one consequence of cheap teleportation would be huge crowds materializing almost instantly at the sites of interesting news stories. Twenty years later the term passed into common use on the Internet to describe exponential spikes in website or server usage when one passes a certain threshold of popular interest (what this does to the server may also be called slashdot effect).

  2. Redhat by Snoopy77 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Before everyone starts screeming, "Why only development for Redhat!" you may note that John Gilmore (evidently a Redhat guy) donated the money for this project. I don't know why Redhat didn't just hire the guy.

    --
    "She's a West Texas girl, just like me" - G.W Bush Iraqis
  3. You can help! by PureFiction · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We are currently running a BitTorrent load test at:

    http://66.139.73.165/

    If you would like to help out an open source content distribution network we would greatly appreciate it!

  4. Open Content Network (P2P for open source) by Orasis · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Another complementary project in progress is the Open Content Network

    The OCN provides an important piece of the puzzle with its metadata proxy servers. These servers automatically generate the verification information (SHA-1 hashes) necessary to perform secure P2P downloads.

    It would be nice if this project leveraged the significant amount of work going into the OCN to provide a standard way to securely delivery any open source content across peer-to-peer networks.

    Check out the OCN specifications here.