Difference between revisions of "NCCN - RCCD"

From DNSA
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "<center> {| |width="600"| |width="50"| |width="600"| |- |valign="top"| <!--fr--> <!--/fr--> | |valign="top"| <!--en--> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Named_data_networking Na...")
 
 
Line 12: Line 12:
 
|valign="top"|
 
|valign="top"|
 
<!--en-->
 
<!--en-->
[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Named_data_networking Named Content Centered Networks]] (also named data networkinh; content-centric networking, content-based networking, data-oriented networking or information-centric networking) is an alternative approach to the architecture of computer networks. Its founding principle is that a communication network should allow a user to focus on the data he or she needs, rather than having to reference a specific, physical location where that data is to be retrieved from. This stems from the fact that the vast majority of current Internet usage (a "high 90% level of traffic") consists of data being disseminated from a source to a number of users.
+
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Named_data_networking Named Content Centered Networks] (also named data networkinh; content-centric networking, content-based networking, data-oriented networking or information-centric networking) is an alternative approach to the architecture of computer networks. Its founding principle is that a communication network should allow a user to focus on the data he or she needs, rather than having to reference a specific, physical location where that data is to be retrieved from. This stems from the fact that the vast majority of current Internet usage (a "high 90% level of traffic") consists of data being disseminated from a source to a number of users.
 
<!--/en-->
 
<!--/en-->
 
|}
 
|}

Latest revision as of 23:33, 17 April 2014

Named Content Centered Networks (also named data networkinh; content-centric networking, content-based networking, data-oriented networking or information-centric networking) is an alternative approach to the architecture of computer networks. Its founding principle is that a communication network should allow a user to focus on the data he or she needs, rather than having to reference a specific, physical location where that data is to be retrieved from. This stems from the fact that the vast majority of current Internet usage (a "high 90% level of traffic") consists of data being disseminated from a source to a number of users.




"par la Multitude pour la Multitude" - "by the Multitude for the Multitude"

Cette page ouverte aux contributions spécialisées. Inscrivez vous sur la liste agora@dnsa.org. Vous pourrez être coopté comme coauteur-mainteneur de ce site et contribuer à cette page.

This page is open to specialized contributions. Please subscrible to the agora@dnsa.org mailing list. We will then be able to be coopted as co-author-maintainer of this site and to contributed to this page.