- I like this! I’ve been thinking about backup slow trickle internet infrastructure; https://sturlabragason.github.io/blog/2023/05/11/RadioNet.html - Have you considered:  - I believe IP over avian would offer much higher transfer speeds then my concept 😅 - Suddenly, udp makes sense 
 
 
- This seems to be similar to what the Reticulum network is, it is a peer to peer network stack designed to work over any medium including lora, packet radio, wifi and anything else you can think of. - That’s awesome!❤️ Didn’t know they existed. It’s awesome that they have a fully functional (beta) version of this! Thanks. 👍 
 
- There aren’t any links in that post and I can’t find any related repositories when I search. Is this a real project or just theoretical? - It’s a concept. The technologies exist but nothing has bee created yet. - It sounds interesting. I’m down to be a test node when you reach that point. 
 
 
 
- deleted by creator - Yes this uses normal ham radio and not LoRa like Meshtastic. - Wouldn’t that mean it’s unencrypted and anyone listening in could potentially read emails if they catch the transmission - Someone could just setup automatic recording and leave that unmonitered and then just remove the useless data at the end of the day - Depends, but yes if you are in the US it is illegal to encrypt data send that way. - Is it illegal to encrypt radio in the USA? - Only amateur radio, because it’s only designed for experimentation, not for day to day use. It’s the same in Australia. 
- Not in general, but on the specific open bands that ham radio operates on yes. This was originally a regulation to ensure these bands would stay open for amateur use and not be hogged by commercial providers, but it feels a bit antiquated these days. 
 
 
 
 
 
- I’ve wanted to play with packet radio for a while now. It’s a shame the article pimps a Cloudflare site (winlink). It’s fitting in a sense though because there is a ban on using encryption over the ham radio bands. So the emails over packet radio must inherently be exposed to the world anyway. 
- What laptop is that in the photo?  - Apparently, the Gateway Computer brand was brought out of retirement a few years ago. They’re rebranded Acer laptops sold exclusively at Walmart. Crazy to see that old logo make a comeback. 
 
 
- Funny how that started  









