An employee sends an e-mail message to coworker in the same office
Are useful for quickly downloading large files, but P2P is also notorious for illegal activity (sharing copyrighted material)
e-mule, bittorrent
Almost all modern Operating Systems support peer to peer networking.
Yes, they did
Almost all modern day operating systems support peer to peer networking, and are usually the standard network protocol after a new installation.
It is possible that they do; the reason for this is that in a peer to peer network each workstation is responsible for their own security, backups, virus protection, etc. You can not mandate tool usage in a peer to peer network. In a client server network you can force policies to be obeyed, but not in a peer to peer network.
The reason peer to peer networks aren't usually installed in large businesses is because of the security risk. Peer to peer networks allow all users on the network access to each others files and systems.
Peer to Peer network model is a way to share data amongst Devices in a WorkGroup. This method requires same Compatible Operating Systems & Common usernames along with same Protocols.
Histograms are typically not used for anything other than looking at patterns of network traffic; it has little or nothing to do with topology or peer to peer systems as is.
Arnold Binas has written: 'Distributed query answering in peer-to-peer reasoning systems'
peer-to-peer
when you run Windows in a peer-to-peer workgroup, one of the systems is responsible for compiling a list of all the systems in the workgroup that have resources to share and for displaying that list in Network Neighborhood/My Network Places. This particular system is called the master browser and is chosen for the role by winning the browser service election.
NO. In a true peer to peer there is no server.
peer peer peer