On Tue, 2008-02-19 at 15:45 -0500, C. Scott Ananian wrote:
> Clicking on a link of this form would add this person to your buddy
> list. Communicating with a this form of buddy would, in parallel, (a)
> attempt to contact the IPv6 Link-Local address formed from the lower
> 64 bits of the SHA-25
C. Scott Ananian wrote:
> On Feb 19, 2008 7:57 PM, Robert McQueen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> C. Scott Ananian wrote:
>> Currently we use the buddy key as this unifying key, but I very much
>> like the idea of providing extra information to open up the prospect of
>> communicating between schools
On Feb 19, 2008 7:57 PM, Robert McQueen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> C. Scott Ananian wrote:
> Currently we use the buddy key as this unifying key, but I very much
> like the idea of providing extra information to open up the prospect of
> communicating between schools, and allowing the XOs to exis
C. Scott Ananian wrote:
> On Feb 19, 2008 5:47 PM, Robert McQueen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> A similar, but more standards-compliant[1][2] proposal might look more like:
>> xmpp:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> The key part of my original proposal is that it also works in the
> (possibly temporary) absen
On Feb 19, 2008 5:47 PM, Robert McQueen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A similar, but more standards-compliant[1][2] proposal might look more like:
> xmpp:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
The key part of my original proposal is that it also works in the
(possibly temporary) absence of a school school or of networ
Robert McQueen wrote:
> Key verification of link-locally reachable contacts can be used to
> resolve these contacts on the local network too.
Ah, I misread a bit of the OP, deriving local IPv6 addresses from the
contact address is actually a pretty neat tweak. :) It's orthogonal to
the addressing
Such a thing would be most excellent, indeed. :)
A similar, but more standards-compliant[1][2] proposal might look more like:
xmpp:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Clicking on a link of this form:
xmpp:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
could add the individual as a friend, or a link like this:
xmpp:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
might s
I propose installing a handler for a new URI type in our browse
application. The links will look like:
friend:name.xxx.school.country.xs.laptop.org
where:
name is a Punycode encoding of the XO nickname. Technically, the
IDN ToASCII mapping operation is performed on the nickname, truncated
on