Rodi or Rodia means pomegranate in Greek. The Rodi program is a tiny P2P client/host (under 300K of binary code) implemented in pure Java. It's network use is similar to the bitTorrent concept. The program will serve the filesharing community with fast data delivery and serve the Open Source community by facilitating faster software deployment. Data distribution networks today provide only search in the file names (if any) and no content search. They were originally created for delivery of binary or not searchable content. Rodi network functional requirements include context sensitive content search. Because Rodi is distributed network keyword rating and consequently search results can differ from publisher to publisher. One can view Rodi network as a group of loosely related or completely unrelated search engines. Publishers belonging to the same Rodi House can use the same function when calculating keywords rate. Existing search engines do not provide search in the previous versions of the index files like HTML, but only in the cached and supposedly recent version of the file. We argue that content of the WEB is getting more and more dynamic and updated much more frequently than before. Rodi client functional requirements include file version manager. Rodi will support content search in the previous versions of the file as well as in the current one. This has been added to Deep Web Research Subject Tracerâ„¢ Information Blog.
posted by Marcus Zillman |
4:00 AM