I have two set up. But I live in the middle of nowhere. So no traffic. However I did get a fly by once. Someone flew over my house on a commercial flight broadcasting. That was neat. Doubt they were able to pick up my reply.
I have been following them for a year or two now, and it is just amazing. I have thought about how hard or easy a system could be built to connect it with lorawan or similar.
Just wanted to say I really like this idea, especially as mixed with local mesh networks. I agree with the point about storage, and mostly I'm just really looking forward to reading about some of these services, and seeing what this could look like in the future.
I heartily approve, without much help to offer. Points of thought...
-Calibre web server good, mirror Annas Archive best, practically somehow getting everyone's downloaded books into a community Calibre would rock.
You're going to need a bigger NAS (Jaws pun, but seriously, this will be at least / more important than your server, redundancy is king)
Probably something lighter / easier too maintain than Nextcloud for simple filesharing, Seafile perhaps?
Honestly, this is the sort of initiative that could drive local Mesh adoption.
What security are you using, most govs/corps don't like private internets, how vulnerable are you to CSAM etc.
I'm aware of a fair amount of local sneaker net approaches (HDD swapping etc), which mostly avoids the security issues. I too would love to hear about successful use cases.
Many student dormitories (at least used to when the internet was still very slow) have such hyper-local intranets for sharing movies and other stuff. A local IRC server with p2p file-sharing was also common. Local network game-servers with games like Minetest might also be popular.
I've used the RockPi-S for a project a while ago. The software to write to the on-board storage was in Chinese and didn't seem to have a way to use English. I had to hold my phone with Google Translate in front of the screen to navigate around it, although that might have been the least unintuitive part of the software. The alternative cli-software refused to compile at first and then refused to use the forwarded USB device. I ended up booting Fedora on my work laptop just to run it.
I recommend trying out Armbian if you still have problems with it. The images provided by them are significantly more reliable, I haven't had any issues, while some official images failed to boot. Also avoid the models with on-board storage, just use an SD card, it really isn't worth the hassle.
I run Armbian on my Radxa devices! A huge life saver.
I use a Rock 5B with an Android TV image for my TV box, but it is janky at best. I'd run an Armbian desktop release of I could, but HDMI is broken on all of them.
The N100 has a 6.4% lower passmark score than the N97 in the base model ($99). This seems like a good competitor to those Topton motherboards from Aliexpress (~$160) that are so common in DIY NAS builds. Most of these CPUs don't have enough PCIe lanes to service all physical connectors, this is solved by using chips that split the lanes over multiple connectors. However, some chips/layouts cause problems with C-states or reduced bandwidth. Does someone know if that is the case here?
EDIT: The normal model doesn't have any SATA connectors.
Can the N100 even run two ports at line speed, let alone 6? Having 2.5Gps ports is cool and all but even using it as a 2-port firewall I’d be curious what throughput you could get with it.
I've got a Protectli VP2420 running OPNSense at home, which has 4x Intel i225-V 2.5gbe running on a weaker Celeron J6412, and I was able to get the expected iperf performance of ~2.35gbps from some brief testing between two directly connected machines. I didn't really do any deeper testing than that though, and I'm not currently doing any crazy threat detection stuff.
Yeah, meant the website title, but in truth it’s tough to tell what’s astroturfing bots vs people here. And honestly these things with 6 2.5GbE ports is plenty impressive, not sure why the website felt the need to goose it like they did.
All of these AliExpress Protectli knockoffs are great for keeping prices reasonable and I'm yet to come across anyone that's rued taking the opportunity to buy one.
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