johnd wrote:My last reply crossed with Porkster's comments, so.....
1.) I presume you are talking about the issue where you can't see everyone in Shareaza's neighbours window. This is normal. Shareaza, and other peer-to-peer discovery-type clients, such as gnutella, will never be able to guarantee this. It is simple...routed peer-to-peer discovery mechanisms never return 100% of clients. This has nothing to do with subnets, or proxies, or any similar thing. It is a fact of life. And becomes much more apparent with small, closed networks such as the Tassy Netspace-restricted Shareaza group. For instance, open your netbios ports to the internet, and see how many peers your can see. Not many, if any. This is because routed protocols do not do peer discovery well. If you do a netbios port scan you will discover many more, but only because you test each and every address.
DC, and similar P2P applications show every member because they are specifically registered in a central location, and do not use discovery mechanisms.
IP's are resolving to the wrong ones because of delays in dynamic DNS services picking up changes.
Sorry, but in my understanding this is not true.
The point I was making had nothing to do with Shareaza as a sole problem. The Netspace problem concerned all areas of Tassie Netspace. Users were getting wrong IP when they were being referenced by others.
I suggested that a subnet mask problem may exisit but I had my bets on Netspace's proxy cache. Now a web proxy server's job is mainly to work on web content but it has to determine what is web requests, therefore it still works with normal requests. The altnerative to the main web proxy doing all the work is to have another proxy layer working out which is non web content. Any EXTRA processing is a fact to cause delays in our data, other words bad pings.
Now regarding Gnutella and decentralised servers / IP web caches. It is a fact that a firewalled user will be very limited in what can be achieved when requesting from another firewalled person. This F<>F problem is a fact and affects all p2p software, be it dc, Shareaza, eMule. On emule this is termed as LowID.
On DC you get an illusion that your working in that you can connect to the main, non firewalled server. There you can chat and so called see others connected and also search for files, but that's where it stops. The next level is can two communciate on a peer to peer level and if the users are F<>F, then there is a good chance data connections wont establish and flow.
johnd wrote:2.) I can't really understand what you are saying here. Transparent proxies work by traffic classification, and then routing to the proxy server. The proxy server does not see all traffic, just web request traffic. As for "RESALE"?????.
If you can't understand the concept of; >??
* A user requesting data off a world location that consumes PAID data allocations.
* Then Netspace stores that users data and re-issues the data to other users, consuming their PAID allocation as well....
* Therefore, Netspace is RESELLING.
?then should I reply anymore to your points? Please, spare me your insults (as below).
johnd wrote:Your next two comments make no sense. I can't reply in your terms. I have no idea what you are talking about as you are making up or using terminology to suit yourself.
Your last comment is self-contradictory. Web traffic is increasing enormously. This means that proxy servers are essential for any ISP to maintain reasonable response times and ensure prompt request handling. If anything, we need more proxies located at suitable points in the network topology. This "day and age" require more proxies, not less.
As internet speeds improve, it doesn't mean the average internet browser user will view more browsing windows. A slight increase in browsing may occure as pages come in quicker and therefore the users can move onto the next topic of browsing.
A Web Proxy only dishes up web pages, not the multimedia and other addins that DSL has made people increase their data usage.
Some where in between OUR LINES and Netspace's HUB to the Internet Backbone is a proxy that doesn't need to be there and it's causing increase delays in our data transits. It need to be closed down.
Yes there was need for proxy web servers in the days of 56K'ing but they are no longer needed. I bet Netspace is selling our cached web content to existing 56K'ers...!
johnd wrote:BTW, it is still trace ROUTE, not trace ROOT.
Actually I stick to my guns on this one. I got a letter from the creator of Trace Route. He said that it was named Trace Route but he agrees that Trace Root would have been more correct name for the routine.
The problem is in language translation. You can't persume that ROUTE in german/dutch is the same as route in english which the computer industry has done. Also more points are in my favor.
You have to realise I'm not swayed by populations/opinion, I go by sheer facts, what is seen in experiments, and logic.
johnd wrote:[EDIT] Ths is not an argument about which is better, Shareaza or DC. It is simply an attempt to make people understand that these two applications work in very different ways. If you understand this, then you will understand why things look different in terms of a list of "neighbours".
You have to realize that DC is arcane. It was created in Napster era an has had near to zero improvements.
People need to grip that sharing files isn't hard drive images, it's shared zips/compressed files and executables that you use to install. Also media file shares. It is VERY BAD practice to share literal hard drive folders as in what dc does. Why? Because you can reproduce bad collections of files used to install software. You also can adopt bad file stamps that software protection may detect and hinder an install or exec.
The Neigbourhood Page in Shareaza in merely a display of the close connections. Being listed in that page doesn't indicate you can share, download and search!
If people do the settings recommend then they will have the bonues to all that Shareaza offers, currently.
Shareaza can do anything any other peer 2 peer utility can do. It only needs a chat room to gather the connected users.
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