Received: by taz.hyperreal.com (8.7.6/V2.0) id JAA19051; Sat, 12 Oct 1996 09:32:22 -0700 (PDT) Received: from sierra.zyzzyva.com by taz.hyperreal.com (8.7.6/V2.0) with ESMTP id JAA19034; Sat, 12 Oct 1996 09:32:11 -0700 (PDT) Received: from sierra.zyzzyva.com (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by sierra.zyzzyva.com (8.7.5/8.7.3) with ESMTP id LAA05838 for ; Sat, 12 Oct 1996 11:32:09 -0500 (CDT) Message-Id: <199610121632.LAA05838@sierra.zyzzyva.com> To: new-httpd@hyperreal.com Subject: Re: speaker for W3C Distributed Authoring Symposium? In-reply-to: gordoni's message of Fri, 11 Oct 1996 18:49:11 -0700. <199610120149.SAA16787@acid.base.com> X-uri: http://www.zyzzyva.com/ Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Date: Sat, 12 Oct 1996 11:32:08 -0500 From: Randy Terbush Sender: owner-new-httpd@apache.org Precedence: bulk Reply-To: new-httpd@hyperreal.com > > My officemate, Jim Whitehead (ejw@ics.uci.edu), is organizing a symposium > > gordoni > > PS: Here is a blurb I wrote recently on where I imagine this technology > might be heading... RST had demonstrated the ability to do this with Apache some time back. The bigger issue in my mind has to be access control. It seems that Postgres' ability to do "time travel" and it's builtin access control could be a viable way to implement this capability.