Excuse the top post,

I'd be happy to use Disk space(lots)/network(gigabit) from here to help out, actually if anyone snagged the stuff from the server over IPv6 it would be even better ;)

Cheers
John

On 1 Aug 2008, at 15:41, Curt, WE7U wrote:

On Fri, 1 Aug 2008, Gerry Creager wrote:

Imagine a site with a CONUS map (to start, and thinking small; we could scale up) where you can use a bounding box to identify your region of interest or cursor to select a particular point (map). After that selection you see an inventory of different maps and types of maps available, and you use a check-list to identify the ones you want. The site prepares a separate page/Torrent stream to provide these, and the page is lightly persistent (days before it ages out) and indexed on a page of recent selections.

You'd have the option of getting the data via download or Torrent at that point. Simplified data delivery.

In this case you don't gain any advantages of the peer-to-peer
distributed transfer.  You only gain the advantage of another method
of server->client that may be easier to use at the client end.

We'd need a server with the space for 100 DVD's worth of data for
DRG's and another 100 for DOQQ's plus space for other types of maps,
professionaly backed-up.  Also need a big pipe 'cuz non-Xastir
people will find it too.

Now:  Imagine the same kind of a setup as you describe but have it
auto-create the torrent files and keep them around, plus post them
on a web site.  As maps get distributed from BIGSERVER over
torrrent, the bandwidth required would go down over time assuming
enough people became seeders.

Of course the reality is the server would become more popular over
time, but the torrents might keep the total bandwidth used more
under control.  Less of an exponential rise anyway.

--
Curt, WE7U.                             archer at eskimo dot com
http://www.eskimo.com/~archer
  Lotto:  A tax on people who are bad at math. - unknown
Windows:  Microsoft's tax on computer illiterates. - WE7U.
The world DOES revolve around me:  I picked the coordinate system!"
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--
John Ronan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, +353-51-302938
Telecommunications Software &  Systems Group,  http://www.tssg.org



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