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[Gzz-commits] manuscripts/storm article.rst


From: Benja Fallenstein
Subject: [Gzz-commits] manuscripts/storm article.rst
Date: Sat, 15 Feb 2003 13:04:42 -0500

CVSROOT:        /cvsroot/gzz
Module name:    manuscripts
Changes by:     Benja Fallenstein <address@hidden>      03/02/15 13:04:42

Modified files:
        storm          : article.rst 

Log message:
        restructure

CVSWeb URLs:
http://savannah.gnu.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs/gzz/manuscripts/storm/article.rst.diff?tr1=1.188&tr2=1.189&r1=text&r2=text

Patches:
Index: manuscripts/storm/article.rst
diff -u manuscripts/storm/article.rst:1.188 manuscripts/storm/article.rst:1.189
--- manuscripts/storm/article.rst:1.188 Sat Feb 15 12:56:58 2003
+++ manuscripts/storm/article.rst       Sat Feb 15 13:04:42 2003
@@ -191,8 +191,8 @@
 Related Work
 ============
 
-Dangling links
---------------
+Dangling links and alternative versions
+---------------------------------------
 
 The dangling link problem has received a lot of attention
 in hypermedia research (e.g. [davis98referential]_). As examples, we examine 
the ways
@@ -248,10 +248,6 @@
 it would be possible to find both the document and links to it,
 no matter which peer in the network they are stored on.
 
-
-Alternative versions
---------------------
-
 Version control systems like CVS or RCS [tichy85rcs]_ usually assume
 a central server hosting a repository. The WebDAV/DeltaV protocols,
 designed for interoperability between version control systems, inherit
@@ -261,18 +257,19 @@
 to branch and merge overlapping repositories without any central control
 [is there a specific ref for this?].
 
-Lotus Notes [ref], popular database sharing and collaboration tool, has some 
+XXX
+Lotus Notes [ref], a popular database sharing and collaboration tool, has some 
 similarities to Storm. In both systems, for instance, data is identified by 
 using GUIDs. However, partly because of the long age of the system, Lotus 
Notes 
 is limited to client-server architecture, whereas Storm exploits adaptive 
peer-to-peer 
-architecture. Groove [ref] is an improved design of Lotus Notes, which employs 
+architecture. Groove [groovesuri]_ is an improved design of Lotus Notes, which 
employs 
 strong security mechanisms and uses peer-to-peer functionality 
 as the basis of communication channels among limited amount of participants. 
 Neither of these systems supports the immutability of data.
 
-[ref HTML version format proposal] Alternate versions important for
-authoring process [search refs]. (Note: Keeping track of versions
-structure is also \*hyper*media. Refs?) (WebDAV!)
+.. [ref HTML version format proposal] Alternate versions important for
+   authoring process [search refs]. (Note: Keeping track of versions
+   structure is also \*hyper*media. Refs?) (WebDAV!)
 
 .. review: http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/griffiths99contentspec.html ?
    couldn't find a relevant angle, as it's a storage /protocol/. hm




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