Update from Forestry.io

Jessica Schilling updated src/_blog/a-guide-to-ipfs-connectivity-in-web-browsers.md
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Jessica Schilling
2021-06-10 20:10:43 +00:00
committed by Forestry.io
parent 342c69da37
commit d4a67fbb77
@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ In a browser, discovering and connecting to peers can be very hard, as we can't
The chat example achieves this in two ways. Using WebRTC-Star, we achieve direct browser-to-browser communication, and with a circuit relay, we have a relay in the middle. The chat application also has a status indicator in the top left to let you know what kind of connection you have. Green means you're connected to the relay, even if it's via another peer; yellow means you're only seeing direct peers; and red means you have no peers (at least none using the chat application).
![Network graph showing the paths nodes can use to discover and communicate with eachother](https://ipfs.io/ipfs/QmX2og5BKJCMVaebEm9ZGsACEYExoGqxhJjePKNc2mZ2pE "Browser IPFS network graph")
![Network graph showing the paths nodes can use to discover and communicate with each other](https://ipfs.io/ipfs/QmX2og5BKJCMVaebEm9ZGsACEYExoGqxhJjePKNc2mZ2pE "Browser IPFS network graph")
🌟 The diagram above demonstrates what a three-user network can look like. It's worth noting that the browser nodes can communicate with `go-ipfs` as well, so BrowserC doesn't have to be a browser at all, but instead could be a `go-ipfs` node!