A New Protocol For Faster Web Services?
Roland Piquepaille writes "Jonghun Park is an Assistant Professor of Information Sciences and Technology at Pennsylvania State University. He says that a new protocol can improve Web services. Sandeep Junnarkar broke the story. "Jonghun Park proposed a method for sharing information between systems linked on the Internet promises to speed collaborative applications by up to 10 times the current rates. The protocol is based on an algorithm that lets it use parallel instead of serial methods to process requests. Such a method boosts the efficiency of how resources are shared over the Internet. The new protocol is called Order-based Deadlock Prevention Protocol with Parallel Requests." Check this column for some excerpts or read the CNET News.com article for more details. More information about Jonghun Park's works can be found at his homepage."
won't that make things more unsafe/unstable too?
because http is plain simple, it is easy to determine where resides what functionality.
if systems become more connected and integrated into each other, won't that make it much harder to determine what is going on on your system?
i can imagine that msft will have a go at running parts on your system on their registration servers. this seems to me like another step towards DRM.
i understand that this is just a protocol, but if people will start interconnecting systems, there will be (security issues)++
Int
Jonghun Park is an Assistant Professor of Information Sciences and Technology at Pennsylvania State University. He says that a new protocol can improve Web services. Sandeep Junnarkar broke the story. "Jonghun Park proposed a method for sharing information between systems linked on the Internet promises to speed collaborative applications by up to 10 times the current rates. The protocol is based on an algorithm that lets it use parallel instead of serial methods to process requests. Such a method boosts the efficiency of how resources are shared over the Internet. The new protocol is called Order-based Deadlock Prevention Protocol with Parallel Requests."
First, there is this whole climate fuelled by RIAA/MPAA that makes the very mention of collaborative applications something criminal.
Secondly, if there is to be a non p2p media sharing usage for this protocol, it has to get industry support. Read M$.
This looks like a solution looking to solve a problem that doesn't exist. Where have we seen this before?