Discovery - Webtile Network

borrows a core concept from cartography: Slippy Maps .

Problem: DHCP IPs change. Laptops move. A static tile coordinate (e.g., "192.168.1.x") becomes obsolete when a device moves to a new subnet. Solution: Use Device Fingerprinting . Instead of storing an IP, store a fingerprint (MAC address + Hostname + OS fingerprint). The tile generator updates the coordinates every discovery cycle. If the fingerprint moves, the tile moves. Webtile Network Discovery

In the modern era of distributed systems, microservices, and edge computing, knowing what is on your network and where it resides has become exponentially more complex. Traditional network mapping tools often provide a macroscopic view—showing IP addresses, MAC addresses, and device names—but fail to deliver the rich, visual, geospatial context required for modern operations. borrows a core concept from cartography: Slippy Maps

Problem: Generating a complex tile (e.g., showing 500 nodes with connection lines) takes 500ms. Panning the map feels laggy. Solution: Predictive Pre-fetching . The client detects the user's pan direction (e.g., moving East). It requests tiles for the East quadrant before the user finishes panning. Part 6: Implementing a Basic Webtile Discovery System (Proof of Concept) If you are a developer looking to build a prototype, here is a simplified tech stack and logic. A static tile coordinate (e