On Fri, Oct 19, 2012 at 01:20:10PM -0400, Miles Fidelman <[email protected]> wrote a message of 43 lines which said:
> To clarify just a bit more: The "scheme" portion of a typical URI > implies a communications protocol, usually involving "listeners" > sitting out on the net somewhere that understand the particular > protocol. Not at all. Sorry but you do not know what an URI is. A scheme is not a protocol (otherwise, it would be called protocol and not scheme) but the identifier of a specific way to encode information in an URI (a name space + syntax). Many schemes (I gave examples in this thread: tag;, geo:, etc) do not imply a protocol and do not create URI that you can "follow". _______________________________________________ p2p-hackers mailing list [email protected] http://lists.zooko.com/mailman/listinfo/p2p-hackers
