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# Server Lab Assessment
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Cory, 
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Nice work! The poem server works, though there are a few edge cases causing 
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500 errors--mostly in handling cases where the result is not found. A few 
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thoughts on your answers to questions:
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> Another situation it might be useful to run the server on my own computer 
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> where I'm the only client on the same computer is to test whether the 
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> serve works the way it should before deploying it to a remote server or 
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> allowing others elsewhere to access it remotely.
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Yes! In fact, apps like Zoom often run small servers locally. When you open a 
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zoom link in an email, your calendar, or a web browser, the link actually
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makes a request from your local machine to the zoom server on the same machine--
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which then kicks zoom into gear and opens up the call. 
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> With google docs, I assume every time something is typed the location of the 
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> character typed as well as what was typed is posted as a change to the 
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> document on the server, so a route might be "change." Given that google docs 
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> allows for near-real-time remote collaboration, google docs likely gets the 
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> document extraordinarily frequently to make it appear that changes happen 
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> nearly instantly, so a route might be "show." Such a route might also 
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> simultaneously check if the user has access, as a user whose access is 
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> removed can no longer view or edit the document.
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Indeed, real-time collaboration implies that changes are being sent to the 
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server right away. It's not unusual for a webpage (particularly one bloated
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with ads and spyware) to make hundreds of HTTP requests in the course of opening
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a single page--but each request has to send its own headers, and has some 
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other overhead. So real-time collaboration uses a newer protocol called
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WebSockets, which opens up one stream, and continuously sends data back
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and forth. Same with video conferencing. WebRTC is an exciting new protocol
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which makes it much easier to build real-time collaboration into all kinds of
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apps, and to have the streaming go peer-to-peer rather than all through a central
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server.
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