Peer$96693$ - significado y definición. Qué es Peer$96693$
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Qué (quién) es Peer$96693$ - definición

ASSOCIATES OF APPROXIMATELY THE SAME AGE, AND USUALLY OF SIMILAR RANK OR SOCIAL STATUS
Peer groups; Peer companionship; Peer friendship; Peer relations
  •  A group of children playing together in [[Bolivia]]

peer-to-peer         
  • Distributed hash tables
  • [[SETI@home]] was established in 1999
  • Overlay network diagram for a '''structured P2P network''', using a [[distributed hash table]] (DHT) to identify and locate nodes/resources
  • [[Torrent file]] connect peers
  • seed]] (large system at the bottom), the pieces are individually transferred from client to client. The original seeder only needs to send out one copy of the file for all the clients to receive a copy.
  • Overlay network diagram for an '''unstructured P2P network''', illustrating the ad hoc nature of the connections between nodes
  • Search results for the query "[[software libre]]", using [[YaCy]] a free [[distributed search engine]] that runs on a peer-to-peer network instead of making requests to centralized index servers (like [[Google]], [[Yahoo]], and other corporate search engines)
TYPE OF DECENTRALIZED AND DISTRIBUTED NETWORK ARCHITECTURE
Peer to peer; Peer-to-peer network; Peer-to-Peer; Peer to peer network; Peer 2 peer; Peer2peer; Peer-to-peer networking; Peer-to-Peer Streaming Systems and Incentive Mechanisms; CoopNet content distribution system; P2P network; Peer (Networking); Peer to Peer; Peer-to-peer communications; Peer-to-peer computing; Peer-to-peer protocol; P2p services; P2P services; Peer-to-peer (computing); P2P Network; CoopNet; Peer-to-peer networks; Peer-to-peer (network architecture); Peer-to-peer model; P2P networks; Peer-to Peer; Peer-to-peer communication; Social impact of peer-to-peer networks; Applications of peer-to-peer networks; P2p networks; Peer (networking); Structured peer-to-peer network; Unstructured peer-to-peer network; Political implications of peer-to-peer networks; Peer network
¦ adjective Computing denoting a network in which each computer can act as a server for the others.
peer-to-peer         
  • Distributed hash tables
  • [[SETI@home]] was established in 1999
  • Overlay network diagram for a '''structured P2P network''', using a [[distributed hash table]] (DHT) to identify and locate nodes/resources
  • [[Torrent file]] connect peers
  • seed]] (large system at the bottom), the pieces are individually transferred from client to client. The original seeder only needs to send out one copy of the file for all the clients to receive a copy.
  • Overlay network diagram for an '''unstructured P2P network''', illustrating the ad hoc nature of the connections between nodes
  • Search results for the query "[[software libre]]", using [[YaCy]] a free [[distributed search engine]] that runs on a peer-to-peer network instead of making requests to centralized index servers (like [[Google]], [[Yahoo]], and other corporate search engines)
TYPE OF DECENTRALIZED AND DISTRIBUTED NETWORK ARCHITECTURE
Peer to peer; Peer-to-peer network; Peer-to-Peer; Peer to peer network; Peer 2 peer; Peer2peer; Peer-to-peer networking; Peer-to-Peer Streaming Systems and Incentive Mechanisms; CoopNet content distribution system; P2P network; Peer (Networking); Peer to Peer; Peer-to-peer communications; Peer-to-peer computing; Peer-to-peer protocol; P2p services; P2P services; Peer-to-peer (computing); P2P Network; CoopNet; Peer-to-peer networks; Peer-to-peer (network architecture); Peer-to-peer model; P2P networks; Peer-to Peer; Peer-to-peer communication; Social impact of peer-to-peer networks; Applications of peer-to-peer networks; P2p networks; Peer (networking); Structured peer-to-peer network; Unstructured peer-to-peer network; Political implications of peer-to-peer networks; Peer network
<networking> 1. The kind of communication found in a system using layered protocols. Each software or hardware component can be considered to communicate only with its peer in the same layer via the connection provided by the lower layers. (1994-12-14) 2. A file sharing system like BitTorrent, Gnutella or Kazaa where computers that download data also serve that data to other downloaders. This increases the total bandwidth available in proportion to the number of users and so reduces download time. This contrasts with client-server where all clients download the data from a single server (or mirror), sharing its fixed bandwidth. (2007-03-28)
peer group         
¦ noun a group of people of approximately the same age, status, and interests.

Wikipedia

Peer group

In sociology, a peer group is both a social group and a primary group of people who have similar interests (homophily), age, background, or social status. The members of this group are likely to influence the person's beliefs and behaviour.

During adolescence, peer groups tend to face dramatic changes. Adolescents tend to spend more time with their peers and have less adult supervision. Adolescents' communication shifts during this time as well. They prefer to talk about school and their careers with their parents, and they enjoy talking about sex and other interpersonal relationships with their peers. Children look to join peer groups who accept them, even if the group is involved in negative activities. Children are less likely to accept those who are different from them.

Cliques are small groups typically defined by common interests or by friendship. Cliques typically have 2–12 members and tend to be formed by age, gender, race, and social class. Clique members are usually the same in terms of academics and risk behaviors. Cliques can serve as an agent of socialization and social control. Being part of a clique can be advantageous since it may provide a sense of autonomy, a secure social environment, and overall well-being.

Crowds are larger, more vaguely defined groups that may not have a friendship base. Crowds serve as peer groups, and they increase in importance during early adolescence, and decrease by late adolescence. The level of involvement in adult institutions and peer culture describes crowds.