#cplusplus
ik_llama.cpp is an improved version of llama.cpp that runs faster on CPUs and hybrid GPU/CPU setups. It supports many new advanced quantization methods, which help models use less memory and run more efficiently. It also offers better performance for special models like DeepSeek and MoE, with faster prompt processing and token generation. You can run it on various hardware, including Android, and it has features to control where model data is stored (CPU or GPU). This means you get quicker AI responses and can handle bigger or more complex models smoothly on your computer or device[2][1][4].
https://github.com/ikawrakow/ik_llama.cpp
I Built a Mesh Network Across the World | Data Slayer
That escalated quickly...
In my last video, I introduced #Reticulum—an open-source protocol that could allow anyone to build networks without relying on traditional internet infrastructure. But there was one big question left unanswered: how far can it actually go?
In this video, I start with a simple setup inside my house and begin pushing the limits—testing communication across rooms, neighborhoods, and beyond using WiFi HaLow and #mesh networking. The goal is simple: see if it’s possible to send real messages across distance without depending on ISPs, centralized servers, or the internet as we know it.
#Network#MeshNetwork
The Internet, Reinvented.
In this video, I build a #Reticulum#RNode and prove that completely different radios — #LoRa and Wi-Fi — can communicate through a hardware-agnostic networking stack. Reticulum routes traffic above the radio layer, automatically bridging dissimilar frequencies, interfaces, and modulation types. I then run it over Wi-Fi HaLow Haven nodes to create a long-range, encrypted IP #mesh with no traditional infrastructure.
Finally, I push it further by running #ATAK across the network, demonstrating a fully open-source, decentralized communication stack in action.
Checkout https://rmap.world/
You can install rnode software on your esp32/nrf52 based meshtastic/meshcore hardware