On Feb 4, 2008 7:24 PM, Michael Rogers <m.rogers at cs.ucl.ac.uk> wrote:
> on each line the key space is divided into 20 regions,
> and each column shows the number of nodes from the first subnet in that
> region. Initially there are roughly 50 nodes in each region, but
> swapping causes the subnets to segregate so that eventually most regions
> are almost exclusively occupied by one subnet or the other.

I would have expected regions close to each other to tend to have the
same subnet, with one subnet occupying one side of the location space,
and the other region occupying the other, yet I'm seeing something
like this:

86 95 86 60 2 1 72 89 87 91 8 5 3 39 108 91 64 6 0 7

There seems to be three "clusters" here, which is rather strange - any theories?

Ian.


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