home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Collection of Internet
/
Collection of Internet.iso
/
infosrvr
/
dev
/
www_talk.930
/
000831_putz@parc.xerox.com _Fri Apr 9 00:12:09 1993.msg
< prev
next >
Wrap
Internet Message Format
|
1994-01-24
|
1KB
Return-Path: <putz@parc.xerox.com>
Received: from dxmint.cern.ch by nxoc01.cern.ch (NeXT-1.0 (From Sendmail 5.52)/NeXT-2.0)
id AA27682; Fri, 9 Apr 93 00:12:09 MET DST
Received: from alpha.Xerox.COM by dxmint.cern.ch (5.65/DEC-Ultrix/4.3)
id AA24059; Fri, 9 Apr 1993 00:31:31 +0200
Received: from spoggles.parc.xerox.com ([13.2.16.98]) by alpha.xerox.com with SMTP id <11685>; Thu, 8 Apr 1993 15:31:10 PDT
Received: by spoggles.parc.xerox.com id <2445>; Thu, 8 Apr 1993 15:31:08 -0700
Date: Thu, 8 Apr 1993 15:30:53 PDT
Sender: Steve Putz <putz@parc.xerox.com>
From: Putz.parc@xerox.com
Subject: Re: WWW Information Discovery Tools
In-Reply-To: <9C69093772A094D1@SCS.SLAC.STANFORD.EDU>
To: www-talk@nxoc01.cern.ch
Message-Id: <93Apr8.153108pdt.2445@spoggles.parc.xerox.com>
Mapping out Web-space is harder than you think.
Not all infinite link chains are loops. For example,
I have a WWW server that uses links to set search parameters,
so infinite sequences like the following are possible:
Change maximum matches from 5 to: 2[1], 15[2], 30[3]
...
Change maximum matches from 30 to: 5[1], 15[2], 40[3], 80[4]
...
Change maximum matches from 80 to: 5[1], 40[2], 90[3], 180[4]
...
Change maximum matches from 180 to: 5[1], 90[2], 190[3], 380[4]