Larry, not to be rube, but it's an open standard,
so go read up on it.  That is why google exists.
ALl of these are easily answered by stuff people
have already written about it.

Seth


--- larry a price <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> so what kind of protocol does gnutella use to
> search for hosts?
> does it scan the local net block and then
> nearby netblocks, ipmulticast?
> 
> and how's the search function? is it nice and
> stable, does it check google
> results too?
> 
> is there a particular network service that
> gnutella uses to find hosts?
> 
> I'm pretty ignorant of the topic if you can't
> tell.
> 
> <html><head><title>html
> sig</title></head><body><div
> style="font:sans-serif;
>
font-size:72pt;line-height:84pt;color:blue1;"><ul><li>sexy
> is good</li><li>
> linux is good</li><li>qed: linux is
> sexy</li></ul><hr><hr><hr><hr><hr><hr>
> <a href="http://www.efn.org/~laprice";>laprice
> at efn dot org</a></body></html>
> On Sun, 30 Sep 2001, Rob Hudson wrote:
> 
> > I figured out that gtk-gnutella works pretty
> good.  At least it
> > doesn't freeze up.  I thought my firewall was
> to blame, but eventually
> > found a host I could connect to and then
> [boom], lots of hosts.
> > 
> > Thanks,
> > Rob
> > 
> > --
> > Rob <rob_at_euglug_dot_net>
> > my @euglugCode = qw(v+++ e--- eug+ bsd+++
> gnu+ S+++);
> > 
> 


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