bittorrent in core? what frontend?
Paul A Houle
ph18 at cornell.edu
Mon Dec 19 15:50:29 UTC 2005
Jesse Keating wrote:
> I'm sorry that BT is so difficult to use that you have to futz with
> firewalls. But I don't feel that it is Fedora's place to allow
> applications to poke holes in firewalls not even on the system.
>
It's not just a question about BT, but rather a question about what
direction the internet is going.
IPV6 adoption looks stalled, and on some days it seems that it will
never happen. (Are ~you~ going to put ~your~ web server on an IP
address that 1% of the world to see?)
One immediate answer to the IP shortage is NAT, which works fine
with certain sorts of protocols (http) but has made other protocols
(ftp) obsolete or unworkable.
If NAT's a fact of life, we ought to start thinking about how to
make our software work in the new age. CPAN, for instance, is a piece
of software that "just doesn't work" in internet 2005 because of ftp
dependence-- most of the machines I run it on have some serious issues
with firewalls, which can sometimes be worked around by setting some
obscure settings to enable passive mode, and sometimes requires work on
the machine-level firewall and sometimes the corporate firewall.
My home network is designed entirely around the needs of devices
that "just work" -- the assumption is that people are going to use PDA's
and internet tablets, and that you can plug in something like an
Xbox360 or an internet stereo. For any problems it may have, UPnP is a
part of making that possible -- of making internet a mainstream
phenomenon, not just something for geeks.
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