Hi Ian,
I meant working implementations of openEHR - I know all about WinSock - even bought it way back when..
To date the problem has been we have a non-open engine with some open specs and an incomplete set of archetypes - not quite the same as the TCP/IP stack etc
I also think the RFC process had some real smarties driving it...but its not a big point.
Cheers
David
---- Dr David G More MB, PhD, FACHI Phone +61-2-9438-2851 Fax +61-2-9906-7038 Skype Username : davidgmore E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Mon, 9 Jan 2006 07:10:39 +0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Quoting David More <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > >> BTW - where is the implementation you mention in point 3?. > A more appropriate question would be, are they any truly proprietary > implementations of TCP/IP? > Windows TCP/IP was initally a third-party product (WinSock) which > was a clever port of the BSD stack. > Sun, Mac, Linux etc. all descend from this same codebase. > Maybe IBM wrote their own at some stage. Don't know about Cisco. > > Point is, the Requests For Comments are descriptions of *working code*, > this has a lot to do with their quality. > > Ian > > __________ NOD32 1.1356 (20060108) Information __________ > > This message was checked by NOD32 antivirus system. > http://www.eset.com |
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