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dc.contributor.authorLedlie, Jonathan
dc.contributor.authorShneidman, Jeff
dc.contributor.authorSeltzer, Margo
dc.contributor.authorHuth, John
dc.date.accessioned2009-04-24T20:26:52Z
dc.date.issued2003
dc.identifier.citationLedlie, Jonathan, Jeff Shneidman, Margo Seltzer, and John Huth. 2003. Scooped, again. Peer-to-peer systems II: Second international workshop, IPTPS 2003, Berkeley, California, February 21-22, 2003, ed. IPTPS 2003, Frans Kaashoek, and Ion Stoica. Berlin: Springer Verlang. Previously published in Lecture Notes in Computer Science 2735: 129-138.en
dc.identifier.issn1611-3349en
dc.identifier.issn0302-9743en
dc.identifier.urihttp://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:2799042
dc.description.abstractThe Peer-to-Peer (p2p) and Grid infrastructure communities are tackling an overlapping set of problems. In addressing these problems, p2p solutions are usually motivated by elegance or research interest. Grid researchers, under pressure from thousands of scientists with real file sharing and computational needs, are pooling their solutions from a wide range of sources in an attempt to meet user demand. Driven by this need to solve large scientific problems quickly, the Grid is being constructed with the tools at hand: FTP or RPC for data transfer, centralization for scheduling and authentication, and an assumption of correct, obediant nodes. If history is any guide, the World Wide Web depicts viscerally that systems that address user needs can have enormous staying power and affect future research. The Grid infrastructure is a great customer waiting for future p2p products. By no means should we make them our only customers, but we should at least put them on the list. If p2p research does not at least address the Grid, it may eventually be sidelined by defacto distributed algorithms that are less elegant but were used to solve Grid problems. In essense, we’ll have been scooped, again.en
dc.description.sponsorshipEngineering and Applied Sciencesen
dc.description.sponsorshipPhysicsen
dc.language.isoen_USen
dc.publisherSpringer Verlagen
dc.relation.isversionofhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/b11823en
dash.licenseLAA
dc.titleScooped, Againen
dc.typeConference Paper
dc.description.versionAccepted Manuscript
dc.relation.journalLecture Notes in Computer Scienceen
dash.depositing.authorSeltzer, Margo
dc.identifier.doi10.1007/b11823*
dash.contributor.affiliatedSeltzer, Margo
dash.contributor.affiliatedHuth, John


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