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The RFC series contains three sub-series for IETF RFCs: BCP, FYI, and STD. Best Current Practice (BCP) is a sub-series of mandatory IETF RFCs not on standards track. For Your Information (FYI) is a sub-series of informational RFCs promoted by the IETF as specified in RFC 1150 (FYI 1). In 2011, RFC 6360 obsoleted FYI 1 and concluded this sub-series.
RFC 1058 (v.1), RFC 1388 (v.2), RFC 1723 (v.2), RFC 2453 (v.2), RFC 2080 (v.ng) Sender Policy Framework: RFC 4408 Secure Shell-2: RFC 4251 Session Announcement Protocol: RFC 2974 Session Description Protocol: RFC 2327 Session Initiation Protocol: RFC 3261 SHA hash functions: RFC 3174, RFC 4634 Simple Authentication and Security Layer: RFC 2222 ...
[79] [80] This practice of publishing April Fool's Day RFCs is specifically acknowledged in the instructions memo for RFC authors, with a tongue-in-cheek note saying: "Note that in past years the RFC Editor has sometimes published serious documents with April 1 dates. Readers who cannot distinguish satire by reading the text may have a future ...
RFC 1945 HTTP/1.0; RFC 9110 HTTP Semantics; RFC 9111 HTTP Caching; RFC 9112 HTTP/1.1; RFC 9113 HTTP/2; RFC 7541 HTTP/2: HPACK Header Compression; RFC 8164 HTTP/2: Opportunistic Security for HTTP/2; RFC 8336 HTTP/2: The ORIGIN HTTP/2 Frame; RFC 8441 HTTP/2: Bootstrapping WebSockets with HTTP/2; RFC 9114 HTTP/3; RFC 9204 HTTP/3: QPACK: Field ...
[4] [5] [6] It is the form required by IETF Requests for Comments (RFC) and working groups. [7] This spelling also appears in most dictionaries. [8] [9] [4] [10] e-mail was originally the form favored in edited published American English and British English writing, and was formerly preferred by some style guides. [4] E-mail is sometimes used. [11]
JPEG 2000; enhanced support for embedding and playback of multimedia; object streams; cross reference streams; XML Forms Data Format (XFDF) for interactive form submission (replaced the XML format in PDF 1.4); support for forms, rich text elements and attributes based on Adobe's XML Forms Architecture (XFA) 2.02 (which defines only static XFA ...
“This is the Hollywood ‘Brat Pack,’” Blum wrote in his piece. “It is to the 1980s what the Rat Pack was to the 1960s — a roving band of famous young stars on the prowl for parties ...
In 1983, he proposed a Domain Name System architecture in RFC 882 and RFC 883. He had recognized the problem in the early Internet (then ARPAnet) of holding name to address translations in a single table on the hosts file of an operating system. Instead he proposed a distributed and dynamic DNS database: essentially DNS as it exists today. [1] [2]