On Jan 31, 2004, at 11:20 PM, Dave Crocker wrote:
iceburg. Personally I think that having all those IP routers doing
store and
forward is a far greater source of problems.
Let's just fully interconnect every host.
Never going to happen. Any protocol that demands it is dead in the
water. corporate security issues will kill it.
<Sermon>
Let's not complain about intermediation points. They have provided
interesting careers for most of us.
</Sermon>
Amen. Especially since they aren't going away.
<Sermon>
I also think there's some inherent assumption among some folks here
that this new thing is going to be Unix/Linux based. We need to
remember that not only isn't the existing reality all Unix/Linux, we're
designing for the future, where we have no idea what the underlying
infrastructure will be, either on the network or hosts.
That's a very important reason why we need to focus on protocols,
services, api's and interfaces and not what goes on behind that,
because this thing needs to survive beyond the internet, beyond TCP/IP,
and beyond our current OS systems. It's also a reason why we should
avoid growing the charter into the storage and delivery parts, because
it's not just a case of grabbing Cyrus iMap and modifying it to the new
setup... You don't know what the filestore and its interface are going
to be, or even if you have a filestore.
SMTP focusses on the network aspect of this, port to port, and
necessary services to support that. And we should keep that same focus
here, and leave what happens after a message is accepted to some other
thing. It's a big enough challenge just to fix that piece that taking
on new challenges will guarantee failure, or significant delays, which
given the current state of SMTP, are as bad as failing.
</Sermon>
Now be careful out there. Here there be Tygers.