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authorkarissa <krmckelv@gmail.com>2017-03-16 10:52:23 +0100
committerkarissa <krmckelv@gmail.com>2017-03-16 10:52:23 +0100
commitb6d28f691170c6b0fbc774af23b4d82ace7a2558 (patch)
treea6125e523b16bbde009e209f0588bf9a3e323f30
parentac1b3eb8e639bfb9e28e5afc593431ccd978279f (diff)
downloaddat-docs-b6d28f691170c6b0fbc774af23b4d82ace7a2558.tar.gz
dat-docs-b6d28f691170c6b0fbc774af23b4d82ace7a2558.zip
add blurb on webrtc-webrtc
-rw-r--r--docs/cookbook/browser.md2
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diff --git a/docs/cookbook/browser.md b/docs/cookbook/browser.md
index cbdadd2..b1853e8 100644
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+++ b/docs/cookbook/browser.md
@@ -4,6 +4,8 @@ Dat is written in JavaScript, so naturally, it can work entirely in the browser!
This approach is similar to that used in Feross' [Web Torrent](http://webtorrent.io). The difference is that Dat links can be rendered live and read dynamically, whereas BitTorrent links are static. In other words, Dat functions more like DropBox or BitTorrent Sync. The original owner can update the files in the directory and all peers will receive the updates automatically.
+Because dat-js uses webrtc, it can only connect to other browser clients. It is not possible for the dat-js library to connect to the UTP and UDP clients used in the Node.js versions.
+
OK, now for the goods.
## Creating a dat