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On 28/04/2014 13:03, Pete Smith N4ZR wrote:
 The RBN team, with important outside help (see below), has been 
working hard to improve our Telnet feed.  Standard Telnet cluster 
servers have a lot of overhead, which can limit throughput or cause 
hard-to-diagnose bugs, so we are looking for a better solution.
 
I'm aware of (and I appreciate) some of the services
provided by the RBN network.  I am computer-literate
and I am a contester.
However, I do not understand how the following terms,
contained in the post, are relevant to amateur radio
contesting.
  a lot of overhead
  limit throughput
  hard-to-diagnose bugs
  two additional servers
  beta test
  reachable on port 7000
  not intended for end-users
  for connection by "retail" clusters
  end-user commands
  stable and reliable service
  future anticipated loads
  peak spot flow
  Windows-based server
  Linux-based
This is presented as if it represents progress in
contesting.  It seems to me, instead, to represent
progress in internet-hosted networking - professional
wired services that serve mainly to illustrate how far
some of us have become detached from person-to-person
contesting using ham-band RF.
Depending on your point or view, this can be good or
bad. It's beginning to look, to me, that amateur radio
is just one more cog in the internet of things.
73,
Paul EI5DI
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