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80.txt -

When a device (like a Raspberry Pi or an OpenWrt router) broadcasts its presence on a network, it uses Port 80 for HTTP traffic.

If you’ve spent any time working with or YOLO (You Only Look Once) object detection, you likely know coco-80.txt . 80.txt

Part of that broadcast includes a TXT record , which provides additional metadata about the service (like the path to an index file). In many logs and configuration readouts, you'll see these two paired together— Port 80 and its associated TXT data —forming a shorthand for how local services identify themselves to your browser. 3. Distributed Storage (GlusterFS Healing) When a device (like a Raspberry Pi or

In high-end server environments, specifically those using GlusterFS , you might see 80.txt appearing in "self-heal" logs. In many logs and configuration readouts, you'll see

1. The "COCO-80" Label Map (Machine Learning & Computer Vision)

This file contains the names of the 80 different object classes from the COCO (Common Objects in Context) dataset.

For those deep in the weeds of mDNS (Multicast DNS) and service discovery, "80" and "TXT" often collide in the context of web servers.