
Please submit an IETF draft ... a thread to this effect has popped up in the Ptomaine group now and then since in theory you can also aggregate the same way on a regional or continental basis. Do you have a good algorithm for the allocation? Do you use the projected population based on WHO estimates for the next 50 years? Do you have an algorithm for adjusting the density of the allocation grid by population density? How do you deal with large IP clusters that fall outside the population grid such as high density business centers. Who adjudicates collisions within the same grid square? For an example of a problem site take the Sears Tower in Chicago? The devil is, as always, in the details. --On Monday, 15 April 2002 03:41 +0100 Jasper Wallace <jasper@ivision.co.uk> wrote:
On Sat, 13 Apr 2002, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
Thus spake "Patrick Thomas" <root@utility.clubscholarship.com>
I am looking for any and all research (and perhaps your comments), references, etc. regarding replacements for the TCP/IP protocol that do not require centralized authority structures (central authority to assign network numbers).
Please explain how you think any protocol could support non-trivial numbers of users without some arbiter to prevent address collisions.
Location - either distribute all the addresses evenly over the planet or try to map to population density.
(the higher your density of sites, the more accurate your coordinates need to be).
you could aggregate addresses by doing something like:
2 hemispheres
36 'triangular' chunks spaced every 10 degrees latitude.
then split up in longditudernal stripes.
but i think you'd be better allocation on the basis of population density.
How exactly you'd make the social and economic changes to get to a system like this vs, the telcos/isps we have now is probably more trouble than it's worth ;-P
There are several alternatives to TCP being researched, but there are currently no viable alternatives to IP.
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