Alright.  That was just how the guy explained it to me.  It may not
fetch anything automatically.  I thought most of those web accelerators
just droped the graphics.  I don't know, i really never caught on to the
Accelerator phase cause i already had a broadband connection when it
came out and really didn't care.  I know at the office we work at 80% of
our employees go to the same website over and over every day.  It has
alot of graphics they see over and over, so a cache server would help to
relieve some of our internet connection.  Can anyone give me some more
info on squid.  I have never heard of this.

-----Original Message-----
From: Craig FALCONER [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2006 4:11 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [pfSense Support] Package Request - Cache Server ???


And I have to wonder if "proactive" caching saves anything other than
time.

I remember those "download accelerators" that would pre-download every
link
on the current web page, but those were really only useful in a
time-charged
situation.  

The main difference between squid and Ryan's description is "updates
every
hour"  I know of no current web cache that fetches/updates content just
in
case its needed.




-----Original Message-----
From: Scott Ullrich [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, 29 June 2006 8:56 a.m.
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [pfSense Support] Package Request - Cache Server ???


On 6/28/06, Ryan L. Rodrigue <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't know if this is possibe, but I was in a guy's office and he 
> had a Computer rack mounted that he said was a cache server.  I had 
> never heard of such a thing, but he said it monitors what pages are 
> frequently visited, download them, periodically checks for updates, 
> and serves the cached pages to people on his network that request it.

> Example:  Everyone's homepage in the office is http://www.google.com.

> It caches Google.com (Specially pics and stuff. Anytime a person opens

> there browser, it serves them the cached page and uses 0 internet 
> bandwidth.  and it checkes every hour for any changes.

Squid?

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