![](/static/253f0d9b/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/a18b0c69-23c9-4b2a-b8e0-3aca0172390d.png)
Got a 1TB dataset sent once, guess it took around 3 days (Netherlands to France) so around 32Mbps. Not bad, not excellent.
Got a 1TB dataset sent once, guess it took around 3 days (Netherlands to France) so around 32Mbps. Not bad, not excellent.
Yep, don’t need to get a headache from crappy 128bps mp3s.
Also because fuck this rent-music mentality.
Now this is interesting, I know about Tor ofc, with all problems surrounding it (exit nodes etc) but I guess an onion website could be made well protected and shared & updated. You have to host it yourself though I guess.
Freenet, gotta dig down and see how it works under the surface, it looks very promising but it’s kind of complex and I haven’t yet figured out if it is all benevolent sharing for example and what happend if some random node sharing your stuff goes offline.
Very interesting!
I think (I’ll dig more to see if it stands) my advantage would be the redundancy (so the data always stays up and is hard to take down), the no need of benevolent nodes, and potentially the ease if use.
Thanks!
Interesting!
I poked around in the (slightly verbose) documentation and stumbled onto this:
Servers should not re-use URIs, regardless of the mechanism by which resources are created. Certain specific cases exist where URIs may be reinstated when it identifies the same resource,
So I wonder if it has the same inbuilt limitation that IPFS has, which means you cannot just update the data you are sharing, without also having to create a whole new link (I know IPFS are trying to work around that, but have seen no decentralised solution yet).
I’ll poke around some more!
Thanks for the link, I hadn’t heard of them before.
Cheers
Ha ha yeah if there were only more competition :-D
The idea is people run nodes (the hard part: routing incoming internet traffic to your PC) and nodes chit chat (any new nodes? Hey I just changed IP address!, … etc) so that there is a lots if known nodes. Identities rely on RSA keys (like ssh does).
Then on top of that (thus making it useful) you can propose a deal for another node: you share my data and I’ll share yours.
Which means people can access your data from your PC or from that other node sharing it for you.
Share it with several nodes (you obviously are sharing theirs) and there will a very high probability your data is accessible all the time.
The sharing is completely trust-less, if a node stops sharing your data, you just stops sharing theirs and gets a new partner, no hard feelings.
Added bonus is that it might be shared all over the world, so hard to take down.
All traffic and data is encrypted, so no node even knows what they are sharing.
You can change IP:port address, and update your data easily (that was the big work to be fair).
That’s about it, the implementation is written in python3 + cryptodome and uses RSA & AES-CTR.
The basic use could be to host a website, or a chat for example.
What do you think?
Thanks!
I actually went there maybe 6 months ago, but they were (which is totally okay) not interested in my protocol or how it works. I’m probably not very good in selling it either 😞😊.
I’m building a sort of new internet protocol, so that we can do away with registrars and dns servers (so everyone can have their “web site”). But I’m quite abysmal when it comes to get people interested :-p
A side question : I’m making a similar protocol, anyone knows some space where you discuss stuff like I2P, IPFS etc?
They all have their pros and cons, and I’d like to see if my protocol and its possibilities would interest.
Cheers
Doesn’t work for me (lemmy.mindoki.com) okay I maybe have only one or two users but still 😅. BTW I had to tilt the phone to get put of the too small “reactive” page so that the search bar showed up.
I just got your message lol :-)
I think my DNS is correctly configured BTW.
Thanks though!
Ha ha lol, so the article is worthless.
Thanks!
Ouch that’s kind of short 🥲 but at least I got your message, guess things will pick up slowly.
Apparently it’s not the nicotine that is bad for you but the smoking (snusa, or chicking tobacco under the lip, is not particularly bad, or I’m on old research papers), inhaling smoke is really bad for you though and that is something we really know about.
Also, I guess we would have noticed “gum chewers” dying everywhere like the 2G phone users, or flat earthers going missing when hiking…
Depends on your software stack.
If your delivery needs a one week installation/upgrade (in say every hospital using your softs, and they all are using different subsets) then you should not release as small as possible releases but match your capacities of men on the ground, people channeling problems, quick bug fixing, etc etc.
I remember that one as a very patchy movie without having any kind of real message. People died for Clint, Clint flew the plane, …
Maybe I’m old though :-) and I know the foxbat (if I remember correctly that was maybe the plane) was the URSS drummed up “superfigjter” which, surprise, wasn’t that super.
Rewriting a researchers patchy python incremental Single Particle Analysis (and Reconstruction) in Qt/C++ was really interesting.
Crazy tech with -186°C cryo electro magnetic microscopes (the guys doing the cryopreservation makes C++ wizards look like normal people) where you scan up houndred of thousands or millions of 2D “photos” over days of some molecule and then you have to figure out the 3D structure. First run with tensorflow for me too so that was a cherry on top back in the day. Classic ‘old’ machine-learning AI was used too.
The tech in the microscopes are amazing as well, diamond knives, lasers, proton beams, quantum mechanics, electro magnetic lenses to focus at different depths and sometimes just transform matter into em radiation to “see” what it wasby some crazy energy source, the different cameras etc etc.
You also get the terminology like black ice but sometimes peta byte storage problems too.
Fun times.
Ah yeah sorry my bad, thanks! Rust isn’t for me, at least today though :-).
My man, I love your optimism :-)
Thanks for the IDE tip though, was thinking about compiling Lemmy one day and if I understand it correctly it’s written in Rust?
Edit: seems like its not a standalone IDE.
Yeah one biiig archive would drown the poor node it is assigned lol.