I was disappointed with the current state of decentralized offgrid solutions. The overwhelming majority is based on internet, which is understandeable, and the other smaller part is niche based on LoRa chinese toys which only a few geeks get. Sorry, but that isn't offgrid the least. Those are niche solutions and things that don't continue to work without internet. Invariably they all need 24/7 servers running on the internet and paying yearly fees for domain names. More than complaining, it has been some years that I keep investing my effort to go deep into that difficult tech solution. There are things that we can take as certainties: 1) NOSTR public/private keys are great for interoperability 2) LoRa is OK for geeks but we can't even agree on a common frequency and it won't become mainstream (ever) 3) everyone carries a smartphone on their pockets (even as things crash) 4) privacy isn't always possible, especially for legal usage of radio 5) network stack has to work on internet, radio and anything in between The result is the 3rd geogram generation. The first was based on bluetooth and normal internet servers which wasn't that different from what existed. The second generation brought apps at the cost of large binary size and forcing continuous updates, it was slow. This 3rd generation of geogram is built after learning those lessons the hard way. A modern social network based on NOSTR and radio-waves. image Reinvent the wheel where needed but reuse the existing roads as much as possible. Reticulum was now adopted (after trying options like I2P), messages over radio links are using APRS so that anyone with a walkie-talkie can send/receive them (even those connected to internet). Instead of static apps built inside the binary, there are now "wapps" which are apps written in WASM that run multiplatform and brings a "wapp store" so that users only need to install what they are interesting in using. There is work like bitchat (which is younger than geogram btw) extending NOSTR over BLE and this isn't much different here, except that reticulum is used underneath and this means that either BLE, WiFi, Internet or radio waves can be used at the same time by different devices. Last but not least, the "Store and Forward" concept is used in everything. This means that all devices participating on the network can route messages to others within their reach and will keep a copy of the message (either encrypted or plain text) to those destination devices in case the device is not reachable for a while, making the messages stronger to reach the destination. In last resort you can use your shoes and physically walk to the destination devices to deliver them messages. This works because everyone has a phone on their pockets. No weird hardware required, at minimum you just use what you already have with you. Do you have more devices like LoRa and ESP32? Great: those are supported too. image Disclaimer: I don't have rich billionaire friends to shill for this platform nor I'm friendly of fedcoins without privacy. You are welcome to try out the android version (most stable and tested) and help with feedback or code contributions:

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LoRa itself isn't, I'm referring to LoRa chinese toys from Seeed, Lilygo, Heltec and so many other producers. I mean no disrespect as I've certainly bought them all. The point is that they will always be exotic toys in the end of the day that only a very scarce few will have when an emergency breaks out and certain as heell won't be able to buy new ones when an emergency is ongoing. Completely unusable for 99.9% of the population when it is really needed.
Why does where it was manufactured mean much? I mean if you design most any circuitry you want mass produced China has long been the place to get it done dependably and affordably. Maybe if the word spreads enough far more will have these cheap toys? That would be a good thing.
Supply chains. When commercial ties are cut tomorrow because or war, viruses or whatever, then Aliexpress won't work any longer to order stuff from the other side of the world. Most people just remember this stuff when disaster strikes and by then it is too late.