ipfs-search
superhighway84
ipfs-search | superhighway84 | |
---|---|---|
16 | 40 | |
842 | 671 | |
0.7% | - | |
4.1 | 5.8 | |
6 months ago | 11 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
ipfs-search
-
admarus alternatives - ipfs-search and Yacy
3 projects | 9 Aug 2023
Admarus is a decentralized alternative to ipfs-search
-
where to find ipfs websites?
You can also use this search engine: https://ipfs-search.com
-
Official CIDs for Tor project and I2P downloads on IPFS if they exist.
ipfs-search.com doesnt allow user submission, but you can use tools like public-gateway-cacher to increase the chances that their dht listener hears of it.
-
Decentralised Search Engines
IPFS Search https://ipfs-search.com
-
Hello guys I'm new to IPFS and have some questions
There's not any main search portal that I know of. I mean, there's this, https://github.com/ipfs-search/ipfs-search / https://ipfs-search.com/ Which afaik looks at the DHT traffic or similar. I'm not great at getting useful results from that, maybe you'll have better luck. r/IPFS_Hashes is a place for people to post things they're hosting.
-
Is there a way to search for newly added IPFS files?
There is already ipfs-search.com, which uses an open source byte analyzer to figure out what type of file it runs into.
-
Handshake vs. ENS
IPFS though has a search engine, https://ipfs-search.com/#/, which seems to work pretty good.
ENS (.eth, .sol, .luna), Unstoppable domains, handshake/namebase, IPFS websites, onion/i2p/zeronet/freenet/lokinet and others will need to get indexed and accessible by a search engine easily by a normal user. Until then, all of these trying to counter ICANN are pretty much useless.
-
I traced that new Satoshi post back to a wallet that has made 83,000+ transactions TODAY
I didnt look into the wallet’s transactions yet, but i searched the NFT names on this IPFS search engine https://ipfs-search.com/ and it came up empty. I don’t know all the specifics of which NFTs end up on the ipfs but the dumb ones my little bro and I minted for curiosity on Solana were on there. I dont know if the search engine is comprehensive, but it’s something—another data point.
-
How to find content on ipfs?
https://github.com/ipfs-search/ipfs-search#building
-
Questions about what an idle node is doing
Nodes announce the hashes they know about so you could sniff this gossip and then build a search engine on top of it which is how ipfs-search works.
superhighway84
-
Would we still create Nebula today?
https://github.com/gravitl/netmaker
Honorable mention:
SuperHighway84 - more of a Usenet-inspired darknet, but I love the concept + the author's personal website:
https://github.com/mrusme/superhighway84
-
Open source P2P alternative to Slack and Discord built on Tor and IPFS
While I do like the idea behind a P2P E2EE chat, I believe that unless you're willing to invest heavily into OrbitDB and IPFS, this project will stay niche at best.
The performance issues that come along with running OrbitDB/IPFS on a machine, let alone a mobile device, are still significant unfortunately. Adding Electron on top of what is already a heavy-weight application is probably going to make people's devices go brrrrr all the time. Not only that, but I would argue that for instant communication this stack might not be the best idea in terms of performance in first place.
Besides, the way IPFS has been (and still keeps) changing their dozens of libraries doesn't make development particularly smooth either. OrbitDB is always behind the latest IPFS version due to all these changes that are being introduced. Hence unless you're planning to allocate developer time on these two things as well, my guess is that you probably won't have too much fun with your back-end.
The integration with Tor is another thing that will likely be a time drain for developers, as other people here already pointed out, and that will lead to even more performance issues down the line.
Don't get me wrong, I really like the idea behind this project. However, I feel like the aspirations are unrealisticly high and the actual outcome might be realtively frustrating for the average end-user. Having that said, I would love my gut feeling to be proven wrong!
Disclaimer: I'm the developer of Superhighway84 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InterPlanetary_File_System#App..., https://github.com/mrusme/superhighway84), a USENET-inspired, uncensorable, decentralized internet discussion system running on IPFS & OrbitDB.
-
Ask HN: Is it time to resurrect a Usenet clone?
Someone created a Usenet-like thing on IPFS. https://github.com/mrusme/superhighway84
It's kind of dead. IIRC the dev put that on the back burner in favor of a new BBS-like app. https://github.com/mrusme/neonmodem
-
YouTube is seeming like a less and less viable platform... they should do the Patreon early-access and uncensored route
If anybody wanted to, anybody could start a RLM SuperHighway84 where we could just talk about RLM stuff all day.
-
We need a community archiving effort for YouTube channels. What's most crucial to protect and how do we get organised?
SuperHighway84 - Is this handy for organization? I like the usenet-style where it sorts itself if people use proper newsgroup names. If people used a 'youtube.channelname' format at least people could maybe scroll down to channels/videos people are talking about.
-
How do you/we share the stuff we hoard so those looking for stuff find it?
In my mind something like superhighway84 would be a better platform, then it's automatically organizing itself to some degree if people post in appropriate newsgroups. People looking for lost youtubers could post in youtube.channelName. That person looking for old VCDs & screeners could post in vcds.screeners.
- We have to prepare ourselves for the possibility that Reddit might try to pull a Tumblr soon
-
Showing off your hoard?
SuperHighway84 is like a usenet style board where people can create whatever newsgroups they want. Anybody could start a 'Datahoarder' highway.
-
10+ years of Sumo GONE
I like the idea of something like SuperHighway84 for talking about our collections. We could make one called YoutubeGraveyard or something. There's also r/DHExchange
-
What do you guys think? (Using ChatGPT)
Have you heard of SuperHighway84?
What are some alternatives?
rabbit-hole - RabbitMQ HTTP API client in Go
berty - Berty is a secure peer-to-peer messaging app that works with or without internet access, cellular data or trust in the network
phalanx - Phalanx is a cloud-native distributed search engine that provides endpoints through gRPC and traditional RESTful API.
searxng - SearXNG is a free internet metasearch engine which aggregates results from various search services and databases. Users are neither tracked nor profiled.
watermill - Building event-driven applications the easy way in Go.
go-orbit-db - Go version of P2P Database on IPFS
machinery - Machinery is an asynchronous task queue/job queue based on distributed message passing.
hubs - Duck-themed multi-user virtual spaces in WebVR. Built with A-Frame.
nebula - 🌌 A network agnostic DHT crawler, monitor, and measurement tool that exposes timely information about DHT networks.
Gosora - Gosora is an ultra-fast and secure forum software written in Go that balances usability with functionality.
Go IPFS - IPFS implementation in Go [Moved to: https://github.com/ipfs/kubo]
awesome-ipfs - Community list of awesome projects, apps, tools, pinning services and more related to IPFS.