Carl,
I don't know who your ISP is but mine has no control over a server running
on my host. They do control the length of my IP lease. In my case the
lease lasts hours. Certainly enough time for a notification. (Not enough
time to host a business...they charge for that.)
I can have a fixed IP address and I can have multiple IP addresses if I so
desire. The use of INDP assumes programmatic interactions in near real
time. If I build an application that relies on this it may well impose
requirements on system/network configurations as well as influence the
components I buy.
I see a real need for programmatic as well as end user notification. We
should be specifying and building enabling technologies. Our role should be
enable policy not to enforce it.
Pete
Peter Zehler
XEROX
Xerox Architecture Center
Email: Peter.Zehler at usa.xerox.com
Voice: (716) 265-8755
FAX: (716) 265-8792
US Mail: Peter Zehler
Xerox Corp.
800 Phillips Rd.
M/S 139-05A
Webster NY, 14580-9701
-----Original Message-----
From: kugler at us.ibm.com [mailto:kugler at us.ibm.com]
Sent: Friday, August 04, 2000 5:25 PM
To: jkm at underscore.com
Cc: ipp at pwg.org
Subject: Re: IPP> notification methods
It's equally impractical in the road warrior scenario. Most ISPs won't let
you run a server unless you pay them for the privilege.
SOHO is another problem. Windows Connection Sharing and other network
address translation schemes are often used so that multiple hosts on a LAN
can all reach the Internet through a single IP address allocated by the
ISP. Of course, ISPs will be happy to sell you more addresses, for a
monthly fee...
So, it's impractical for enterprise, SOHO, and dial-up. What does that
leave? Possibly some university networks (and Lexmark ;-) ); I can't
think of much else.
-Carl
Jay Martin <jkm at underscore.com> on 08/04/2000 02:53:08 PM
Please respond to jkm at underscore.com
To: Carl Kugler/Boulder/IBM at IBMUS
cc: ipp at pwg.org
Subject: Re: IPP> notification methods
Carl,
Ah, now you've caught my attention... ;-)
> Me and 99% of other end users in the real world. INDP over the Internet
is
> not impossible, just impractical.
We must assume your term "end users in the real world" refers to
enterprise environments, right?
That is, if the "real world" implies a usage scenario describing a
"Road Warrior sitting in her hotel room wanting to print a document
at a local copy shop", then in your opinion can INDP satisfy those
99% of "real world" users? Or is it equally impractical as in the
enterprise environment?
...jay