Here are the key highlights and experiments from the video:
What Makes Reticulum Different [04:31]: Unlike popular projects like Meshtastic (which treats the radio itself as the network), Reticulum is a full, hardware-agnostic networking stack. This means it can use different types of physical interfaces—like LoRa radios, Wi-Fi, Ethernet, or even old serial cables—interchangeably.
Identity & Encryption [05:55]: Reticulum doesn't use IP addresses, phone numbers, or usernames. Every device generates its own cryptographic identity, and all traffic is encrypted by default.
Bridging Dissimilar Radios [07:51]: The creator successfully demonstrates sending a message from a node strictly using a 915 MHz LoRa radio to a phone running a client solely connected over 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi. Reticulum seamlessly bridges these completely different frequencies and hardware types.
Long-Range IP Mesh with Wi-Fi HaLow [10:14]: Pushing the limits, the creator installs Reticulum on "Haven nodes" (Raspberry Pi routers) using Wi-Fi HaLow (802.11ah) cards. This successfully establishes a long-range, sovereign routing layer independent of traditional internet infrastructure.
Running ATAK over Reticulum [15:36]: In a highly impressive test, the creator manages to run ATAK (Android Tactical Awareness Kit)—a situational awareness app originally developed by the DoD and used in search & rescue—completely off-grid over the Reticulum and Wi-Fi HaLow network.
Titanium RNode Build [22:49]: The video concludes with a look at a custom RNode device built with an aerospace-grade 3D-printed titanium faceplate.
Page 22: The server looks downright depressed. And the client isn't even connected to the server.
On Firefox, the text on the last page shows during the page turn animation. But once the page flattens, the text disappears. I also had similar random pages not rendering if I try to flip through quickly, as when I tried to find page 22.
This paper shows that humans are evolutionary carnivores. There are 25 points ranging from various fields in science. Our increased brain sizes and large fat stores in comparison to other primates are just some of the clues. We have different colon/intestine ratios because we spend less time fermenting plants and simply digest meats better. Our higher pH in our stomachs also points to it.
Yes, we can eat plants. But it's not optimal. And we're worse at doing it than our evolutionary cousins.
What Makes Reticulum Different [04:31]: Unlike popular projects like Meshtastic (which treats the radio itself as the network), Reticulum is a full, hardware-agnostic networking stack. This means it can use different types of physical interfaces—like LoRa radios, Wi-Fi, Ethernet, or even old serial cables—interchangeably.
Identity & Encryption [05:55]: Reticulum doesn't use IP addresses, phone numbers, or usernames. Every device generates its own cryptographic identity, and all traffic is encrypted by default.
Bridging Dissimilar Radios [07:51]: The creator successfully demonstrates sending a message from a node strictly using a 915 MHz LoRa radio to a phone running a client solely connected over 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi. Reticulum seamlessly bridges these completely different frequencies and hardware types.
Long-Range IP Mesh with Wi-Fi HaLow [10:14]: Pushing the limits, the creator installs Reticulum on "Haven nodes" (Raspberry Pi routers) using Wi-Fi HaLow (802.11ah) cards. This successfully establishes a long-range, sovereign routing layer independent of traditional internet infrastructure.
Running ATAK over Reticulum [15:36]: In a highly impressive test, the creator manages to run ATAK (Android Tactical Awareness Kit)—a situational awareness app originally developed by the DoD and used in search & rescue—completely off-grid over the Reticulum and Wi-Fi HaLow network.
Titanium RNode Build [22:49]: The video concludes with a look at a custom RNode device built with an aerospace-grade 3D-printed titanium faceplate.
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