Peer-to-peer

From Organic Design wiki
Revision as of 19:34, 3 December 2010 by Infomaniac (talk | contribs) (See also: Handbook of Peer-to-Peer Networking)
Glossary.svg This page describes a concept which is part of our glossary

Peer-to-peer networks are known for their robustness and reliability. The way peers connect with other instances to form the network creates a peer-to-peer infrastructure. It enables users to connect directly with each other as desired to exchange products and services without having to employ middlemen as in the current centralised 'client-server' approach.

The structure of the peer is completely open and transparent, similar to 'open source' software, of which the increasingly popular Linux computer operating system is an example. It differs from the Open Source model in that all applications derived inside the network evolve from concepts formed by users using the system, not from specialists developing program code.

See also

State-of-the-Art

Xuemin Shen, Heather Yu, John Buford, Mursalin Akon, Handbook of Peer-to-Peer Networking (torrent)

  • Springer | 2009 | ISBN: 0387097503 | 1403 pages | PDF | 10,2 MB
  • hash: C3BA9770 7C9E3C80 019DD55E 2207529A B876700D

Videos