nanog mailing list archives
Peering (and other petty bickering)
From: Sean Donelan <SEAN () SDG DRA COM>
Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 10:44:40 -0500 (CDT)
Look up ''peer'' in a dictionary, in this context it means something like ''networks of equal size''.
I think you have cause and effect reversed. A peer is someone you treat as an equal. In fact, in the original meaning of "Peer," the Peers of the Realm (Barons, Lords, etc) were often extremly inequal in terms of property and power. To end a the petty bickering that went on between various fiefdoms, the soverign conferred peerages. In the IP world, "peers" can also be of very different sizes. Whether you are a supercomputer or a pc, in the IP world they treat each other as peers (equals). They aren't peers because they are equal size.
The internet is moving towards a scenario with a handfull global players that will be ''peers'' everyone else will become a customer.
Have the telco's really won the war? Another meaning for "Peer" is the Noble class that ruled over the lower classes. Do we really want the soverign to step in and declare who is a peer and who isn't? -- Sean Donelan, Data Research Associates, Inc, St. Louis, MO Affiliation given for identification not representation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Current thread:
- Peering (and other petty bickering) Sean Donelan (May 03)
- Re: Peering (and other petty bickering) Michael Dillon (May 03)