Thanks.

I'll have to take a look at cjDNS again, when I first heard about it, it was still under development. I don't know anything about hyperboria - must research.

I was considering BATMAN as an option for the anonobox wifi. I think it has been (or will be soon be) integrated into the Linux kernel. I don't know which has better fundamentals, netsukuku or batman, but batman would seem to be a more active project - but that doesn't necessarily mean it's better. Can anyone here speak to the real-world differences between the two?

Cheers,

Tyler Jordan


On Mon, 13 May 2013 19:34:44 +1000, Yussi <[email protected]> wrote:

I haven't properly tested those, but there are now several
alternatives to netsukuku, I hear commotion is quite good, cjdns also
looks promising.

The very neat thing about the netsukuku's design for me was the
addressing system (the whole node,gnode,ggnode...), but as far as a
dynamic wireless meshes goes, there are now quite a few more active
projects which are at much more advanced stage than this.

for not so dynamic meshes, you can use OSLR or BATMAN, those are both
mature projects.

for darknets, cjdns/hyperboria looks very good, and gnunet is one to
keep an eye on. I used to have i2p running, but it's java based so I
guess until someone implements the whole thing in something other then
java it's out of the game.

Those are my two cents.

_______________________________________________
Netsukuku mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/netsukuku

Reply via email to