neonmodem
freenet-core
neonmodem | freenet-core | |
---|---|---|
16 | 78 | |
500 | 2,024 | |
- | 0.5% | |
6.2 | 9.7 | |
5 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Go | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
neonmodem
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Neonmodem: TUI for Lobsters, HN, etc.
They seem to have spent a ton of time on their website, why link to the github with no information? https://neonmodem.com/
- Neon Modem Overdrive
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Orange Site Hit
Shameless plug: Neon Modem Overdrive [1] supports HN, for anyone looking for a Go single-binary multi-platform TUI.
[1] https://neonmodem.com
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Open source P2P alternative to Slack and Discord built on Tor and IPFS
Thank you for the detailed description of your idea. Indeed, if you're willing to accept the shortcomings of a dedicated USENET infrastructure, then it is definitely something that could be done. In fact, I did consider NNTP for another project of mine (https://github.com/mrusme/neonmodem), which might eventually swallow up Superhighway84 altogether. If you're interested in actually giving it a try and implement a functional NNTP library for Go I'd be more than happy to make use of it! :-)
> Superhighway84 it was very expensive for me to actually run the software
I agree with you, in terms of efficiency IPFS is still miles away from where it should be. Hence my feedback on Quiet, as I do not perceive IPFS to radically imrpove within the next few months or even years. And as you correctly stated it looks like Quiet uses some workarounds to improve on the overall mediocre efficiency of IPFS, which however lead to shortcomings on other ends:
> Quiet itself notes a limit of 30-100 individuals with its application
However, this is not how P2P should be. I'd be truly curious to hear from someone at OpenSea, or Fleek, or any of the services that offer high volume IPFS hosting about their experience and gut feeling on its future. I personally gave up on hosting my website via IPFS myself -- which I did for a brief period of time -- mainly for these exact reasons.
> but for those of us who are bandwidth-constrained or otherwise limited in our access to those technologies
I believe that quite on the contrary, this might benefit these people the most. Imagine not having to do the roundtrip from your phone, to a server on the internet, back to your computer, just to have a synchronized state of your address book available.
Similarly, imagine writing with someone in your city -- let's say Melbourne, Australia -- without your messages first travelling to Utah, USA, and then back again. My gut feeling is that overall congestion on the internet could even be reduced, by allowing more applications to communicate directly within small meshes rather than travel all the way across the globe and back again. That is, as soon as there are more efficient ways to deal with the overhead that is currently breaking IPFS' neck.
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A Curated List of Lemmy Apps
A BBS-style command line client that supports various projects as backends and seamlessly integrates them into a streamlined user interface. (Website, Github).
- Neo Modem Overdrive: Terminal Client for HN, Lemmy, Lobsters and More
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Moving to a New Platform—Maybe Lemmy?
Besides, have you seen this Lemmy client? Neon Modem Overdrive
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Does it make sense to disable the app for the protest?
Yes, including Neon Modem Overdrive, for a retro BBS experience.
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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
freenet-core
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Dioxus 0.5: Web, Desktop, Mobile Apps in Rust
I just picked Dioxus to build a decentralized homepage for Freenet[1], it will be the first decentralized website people see when they get Freenet set up. It reminds me a bit of my Kotlin web framework called Kweb[2] that I've been working on on-and-off for a few years now, particularly the way it handles state and the DSL that maps from code to HTML. So far I like what I see.
[1] https://freenet.org/
[2] https://kweb.io/
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Social Media First Amendment Cases
I find that surprising, even in 2010 it was difficult to find illegal content on Freenet unless you were looking at it - and certainly in recent years it's virtually impossible, the default indexes are carefully vetted.
In any case, the original Freenet was never going to be a general-purpose replacement for today's centralized services. For the past few years we've been working on a sequel to Freenet, you can learn about it at https://freenet.org/.
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Google Search Drops Cache Link from Search Results
MaidSAFE appears to be just another IPFS which you can pay to get your data hosted on.
HyperCore apparently got acquired and they are a company seeling solutions to businesses.
Freenet 2023 is a FOSS project. I'm watching the matrix server for a while. Ian says they're launching the network in 2 weeks. It is a decentralized data store + runtime. So while the original Freenet was analogous to disk, Freenet 2023 is analogous to an entire computer. See https://freenet.org/
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Bye, Gemini
I loved playing around with Gemini. Something loosely along those lines can definitely work. Who knows what will become popular in the future. Extreme web page bloat leaves the door open.
Here are a couple of other alternative ideas for the web:
https://freenet.org/
https://github.com/runvnc/tersenet (an idea, not implemented)
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What Type of Research Can Bring Value to the Community?
I think cryptography is a decentralizing force in general, though its intersection with ML is small, Also, related things, steganography, differential privacy, federated learning, all things that tend to decentralize. Anonymizing text fingerprint with LLMs, ML-ish censor evading algo , possibility of a decentralized vector database
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Ephemeral anonymous identities that can be slashed once forever with a single nullifier
btw, you may be interested in https://github.com/freenet/locutus/
- Ask HN: Is it time to resurrect a Usenet clone?
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AMA: Ian Clarke creator of Freenet 2023 - a drop-in decentralized replacement for the web
Through a variety of mechanisms that you can read about here.
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Upcoming AMA: Ian Clarke, creator of FreeNet and the new FreeNet 2023 || Friday 9 June
This Friday we will be hosting an AMA with Ian Clarke (/u/sanity) the creator of FreeNet and the recently announced FreeNet 2023.
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Consider Joining Lemmy
check out https://github.com/freenet/locutus/discussions/619 i like it
What are some alternatives?
paopao-ce - 🔥An artistic "twitter like" community built on gin+zinc+vue+ts 清新文艺微社区
Freenet - Freenet REference Daemon
ttchat - Twitch chats in the terminal
zeronet-conservancy - zeronet-conservancy is a client for decentralized p2p web 0net, focusing on preserving 0net and transition to riza network
mercator - OpenStreetMap but as terminal user interface (TUI) program
ZeroNet - ZeroNetX - Decentralized websites using Bitcoin crypto and BitTorrent network
BLAHAJ - 🦈🏳️⚧️🏳️🌈 Gay sharks at your local terminal - lolcat-like CLI tool
aether - Aether client app with bundled front-end and P2P back-end
irssi - The client of the future
gitoxide - An idiomatic, lean, fast & safe pure Rust implementation of Git
nimnews - Immature Newsgroup NNTP server using Nim and SQLite
rust-libp2p - The Rust Implementation of the libp2p networking stack.