<page xmlns="http://projectmallard.org/1.0/"
      xmlns:e="http://projectmallard.org/experimental/"
      type="topic"
      id="salut-protocol">

  <info>
    <link type="seealso" xref="create-account"/>
    <desc>
      Understanding the People Nearby feature.
    </desc>
    <revision pkgversion="2.28" version="0.1" date="2009-08-12" status="draft"/>
    <revision pkgversion="2.28" version="0.1" date="2009-08-14" status="review">
      <!--
      <e:review by="shaunm@gnome.org" date="2009-09-09" status="deferred"/>
      -->
    </revision>
    <credit type="author">
      <name>Milo Casagrande</name>
      <email>milo@ubuntu.com</email>
    </credit>
    <license>
      <p>Creative Commons Share Alike 3.0</p>
    </license>    
<!--
    <copyright>
      <year>2009</year>
      <name>GNOME Documentation Project</name>
    </copyright>
    <include href="legal.xml" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude"/>
-->
  </info>

  <title>What is People Nearby?</title>

  <comment>
    <cite date="2009-09-09">Shaun McCance</cite>
    <p>I'd like to see this played up a bit more.</p>
  </comment>

  <p>
    The People Nearby service is a serverless communication service:
    you do not need to connect and authenticate to a central server in
    order to use it.
  </p>
  <p>
    This kind of serverless messaging system is restricted to a local area
    network and an active Internet connection is not necessary.
  </p>
  <p>
    The people that use this service inside the same local area network
    will be auto-discovered, and it will be possible to send them messages
    and files as with other services.
  </p>
  <p>
    All the modern local area networks should be able to support this kind
    of service.
  </p>
</page>