Content Networking: Architecture, Protocols, and PracticeElsevier, 2005. gada 24. marts - 352 lappuses As the Internet has grown, so have the challenges associated with delivering static, streaming, and dynamic content to end-users. This book is unique in that it addresses the topic of content networking exclusively and comprehensively, tracing the evolution from traditional web caching to today's open and vastly more flexible architecture. With this evolutionary approach, the authors emphasize the field's most persistent concepts, principles, and mechanisms--the core information that will help you understand why and how content delivery works today, and apply that knowledge in the future.
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No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 36.
4. lappuse
... browsing through a collection of information resources without having to worry about their actual location or their format. This section will briefly describe the origin of the Web, where it came from and why it has been so successful ...
... browsing through a collection of information resources without having to worry about their actual location or their format. This section will briefly describe the origin of the Web, where it came from and why it has been so successful ...
5. lappuse
... browser written by CERN student Nicola Pellow. Other people soon started implementing browsers on different platforms. By 1992, first versions of Erwise, ViolaWWW, and MidasWWW were introduced for the X/Motif system, followed by a CERN ...
... browser written by CERN student Nicola Pellow. Other people soon started implementing browsers on different platforms. By 1992, first versions of Erwise, ViolaWWW, and MidasWWW were introduced for the X/Motif system, followed by a CERN ...
6. lappuse
... browser software—Internet Explorer. With Microsoft entering the browser market, a bitter fight began to establish dominance in Web software—often referred to as “The Browser War.” While the relentless competition between Netscape and ...
... browser software—Internet Explorer. With Microsoft entering the browser market, a bitter fight began to establish dominance in Web software—often referred to as “The Browser War.” While the relentless competition between Netscape and ...
7. lappuse
... browser or clicking on a predefined button. A homepage is a hypertext document, which typically serves as an entry portal to a Web site. It can contain hyperlinks to other Web objects, stored either locally on the same server or ...
... browser or clicking on a predefined button. A homepage is a hypertext document, which typically serves as an entry portal to a Web site. It can contain hyperlinks to other Web objects, stored either locally on the same server or ...
8. lappuse
... browsers. Identifying Web objects—URNs, URLs, and URIs The World Wide Web is inhabited by a large number of objects that may reside on any Web server anywhere in the world. To find and access a specific Web object, the user needs some ...
... browsers. Identifying Web objects—URNs, URLs, and URIs The World Wide Web is inhabited by a large number of objects that may reside on any Web server anywhere in the world. To find and access a specific Web object, the user needs some ...
Saturs
1 | |
25 | |
53 | |
Chapter 4 Caching Techniques for Streaming Media | 81 |
Chapter 5 Navigating Content Networks | 109 |
Chapter 6 PeertoPeer Content Networks | 147 |
Chapter 7 Interactive Content Delivery Instant Messaging | 179 |
Chapter 8 Beyond Web Surfing Content Services | 217 |
Chapter 10 Standards Efforts | 279 |
Chapter 11 Summary and Outlook | 299 |
AppendixXML Basics | 311 |
Glossary | 313 |
RFC References | 325 |
References | 331 |
Index | 345 |
Chapter 9 Building Content Networks | 263 |
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Content Networking: Architecture, Protocols, and Practice Markus Hofmann,Leland R. Beaumont Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2005 |
Content Networking: Architecture, Protocols, and Practice Markus Hofmann (Computer scientist),Leland R. Beaumont Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 2005 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
allows application message architecture audio bandwidth browser cache callout protocol callout server Chapter client request communication connection content consumer content delivery content delivery network content networking content providers content services cookie defined described device distributed document Domain Name Domain Name System endpoints Ethernet example Figure format Global Gnutella header host ICAP ICAP client ICAP server identified IETF implement instant messaging interactive interception proxies Internet IP address Layer load MSRP multicast multimedia name server Napster network provider object operation OPES processor origin server packet peer-to-peer peer-to-peer networks peers port presence information Profile resource response retrieve reverse proxy Router RTSP scalability sends servent service activation point service node session specification standards streaming media switch tion traffic transaction transport protocol typically UDDI VoiceXML Web cache Web server wireless WSDL XMPP