#shell
Try is a simple Ruby tool that organizes your coding experiments in one folder like ~/src/tries, using fuzzy search to quickly find or create dated directories (e.g., 2025-01-18-redis-test). Install via `gem install try-cli` or curl the single file, then add `eval "$(try init)"` to your shell—no setup needed. It ranks recent projects highest with smart matching, so you avoid scattered "test" folders and lost /tmp work. This saves time jumping between ideas, keeping your chaotic projects instantly accessible and productive.
https://github.com/tobi/try
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