Comment by nunobrito

Comment by nunobrito a day ago

49 replies

OK but kind of outdated and incomplete. Meshcore is largely competing with Meshtastic nowadays: https://meshcore.co.uk/

To remember: LoRa only permits small text messages. Don't even think about images, voice nor binary files (I mean it).

Another option is APRS using satellite connections through a cheap chinese walkie-talkie (Quangsheng UV-K5) for 20 euros to send text messages.

tecleandor a day ago

What I don't get about Meshcore is... What's their goal. They seem a commercial venture, their contact email is customers@..... I don't know they're license... I rather use meshtastic.

  • victorbjorklund a day ago

    I think their basic idea is to have a more advanced (and therefore scaleable mesh) where you can have more control over the path your packets take. I dont get the impression they are very commercial. Seems to been started by people first approaching meshtastic with proposed changes to the algo and getting rejected and therefore "forking" (forking in quotes because I dont think they share any code)

  • MaKey 18 hours ago

    Their iOS / Android apps are closed source, which is a turnoff for me.

    • nunobrito 16 hours ago

      Yeah, that is crappy indeed. The core itself is open source and someone could write a different android app but I doubt it would show up there as option.

      In either case, they are a good competitor.

alnwlsn 18 hours ago

If I go to https://meshcore.co.uk/about.html, the fact that there is two youtube videos there and not a button that says "Download Docs PDF" shows me exactly how serious they are about "[We] connect people and things, without using the internet"

lambdaone 16 hours ago

You could just about squeeze voice down LoRa with a really low-bandwidth codec, as really aggressive codecs can manage < 0.5 kbps. If you want to sacrifice voice quality but use standard codecs, the military MELPe codec has 600 bits/s as one of its standard modes.

  • nunobrito 14 hours ago

    And yet such implementation never was seen outdoors.

    Because it would likely violate the restrictions setup for the LoRa frequency. Using a normal walkie-talkie has none of those limitations while being cheaper and more versatile.

ChrisMarshallNY a day ago

Huh. Hadn’t heard of Meshcore before. Thanks for that. It sounds more organized than Meshtastic. Seems more polished, but also a bit more opaque (from my cursory examination). That may just be, because it’s not had as much time to get established. It has all the open credentials.

From her article:

> Their answer was both depressing and freeing: “You can’t. All you can do is be prepared with tools and a plan for when the crisis arrives. That’s when the organization will listen.”

That is so sad, but also, so true.

I was fortunate to have worked for a company that is over 100 years old, and that had weathered a couple of wars, depression, recession, market disruption, etc.

They were about as open to disaster planning as anyone, but they could also be head-in-the-sand knuckleheads. The biggest thing was the company had a fiscal and cultural conservative bent; quite unusual in the tech industry, these days.

Anyone that has managed a DR system, knows how difficult it is to get support. Disaster Recovery is expensive, resource-intensive, and difficult to test. It is also stuff people don’t want to think about. Sort of like insurance.

  • nunobrito a day ago

    My suggestion as someone preparing for this kind of stuff since quite a while:

    + Quangsheng UV-K5 + Android phone with 3.5 mm audio jack + APRSdroid installed

    Forget about LoRa, that is basically a toy. It is far more useful to have a functioning walkie talkie capable of talking with satellites and other stations at 50 kilometers of range.

    • bigfatkitten 11 hours ago

      > Forget about LoRa, that is basically a toy. It is far more useful to have a functioning walkie talkie capable of talking with satellites and other stations at 50 kilometers of range.

      You’re not going to reliably get that without terrestrial infrastructure, unless both you and your correspondent are conveniently standing on mountaintops.

      5km in the suburbs, maybe. Closer to 500m at street level in an urban environment.

    • ChrisMarshallNY a day ago

      The issue with satellite stuff, is that it’s pretty sensitive to active attack. It will be available for things like natural disasters, but not necessarily for war.

      In either case, jamming is a possibility.

      • nunobrito a day ago

        That is inaccurate. You will NOT be able to jam a satellite outside local areas, the amount of power to do is monstrous and likely to cause cancer for anyone around.

        In a real scenario these things work. Please don't fall into "what if's" which are exotic and confused as things bigger than what they are.

    • MaKey a day ago

      You need a ham radio license to send data on APRS frequencies.

      • detaro a day ago

        Depends. Various parts of Europe have bands that can be used licenseless and allow data, e.g. in Germany there was somewhat of a community doing APRS-over-CB (past tense because I haven't kept up if thats still a thing).

      • nunobrito a day ago

        Except under emergency situations, which are the cases we are talking here.

      • dahrkael a day ago

        i always wondered if in case of natural disaster/war the state does really have the time and resources to chase unlicensed use of radio frequencies

  • MaKey a day ago

    AFAIK Meshcore was started by a disgruntled Meshtastic developer. It has got a smaller community and is messaging only, no sensor data transfer.

    • nunobrito a day ago

      Then maybe time to know more rather than just throwing such claims.

      The network itself does far more than what other projects were doing and is being fast adopted across Europe.

      • MaKey 20 hours ago

        > Then maybe time to know more rather than just throwing such claims.

        Then please educate me, I'm listening.

ajsnigrutin a day ago

The problem with lora (and APRS over satellite... well, even ground APRS) is, that the bandwidth is very limited and usually only for "one person at a time", so while meshtastic/meshcore might be fine for tens of stations and a few users chatting, once those numbers get higher, the routing/signalization uses up most of the bandwidth, and many people sending messages at the same time makes the whole system very unreliable.

APRS is a bit better, because it requires ham licences and (usually) a bit more expensive equipment, but with "SmartBeaconing" and just a few hams, you get collisions (multiple people transmitting at the same time, effectively jamming eachother).

Reddit is usually full of preppers and other idiots buying these cheap chinese radios, usually without any knowledge and licences (that are needed to use them), and in turn they know nothing about actual use of those devices.... simplex range in urban environment is measured in hundreds of meters or maybe one or two large buildings between radioss, and repeaters will be in use by actual emergency servics and not really usable for any kind of "private use".

tldr: get a few books, a pack of cards, wait it out, not so long ago being unreachable away from home was the norm, and we managed.

  • akvadrako 21 hours ago

    On the other hand, getting a license is pretty easy. If you have a US address you can take 2 ten minute exams online for $10 to get General class; that's usable when traveling globally. It's a fixed pool of about 300 questions, so a half day of studying should be enough.

    With the license, there are ham repeaters for FM and DMR. My cheap Chinese radio can reach the repeater 15km away.

    It also supports APRS, but only for sending beacons. I can't really test it as there aren't repeaters around.

  • nunobrito a day ago

    Please stop with the FUD.

    Portugal was for 24 hours without electricity. LoRa networks were jammed and non-operational because the bandwidth is limited. APRS kept working.

    It is far better to have a walkie-talkie that you can use as PMR on the 446 range and use for satellite text messages than an expensive toy that very few use.

    And as you also know: You do NOT require a radio license when operating under emergency situations, which is the context on this case.

    • ajsnigrutin a day ago

      > And as you also know: You do NOT require a radio license when operating under emergency situations, which is the context on this case.

      In portugal? Yes, you need one. Probably in every other EU country too

      In USA too.

      I have no idea where people got the myth of not needing a licence in emergencies, probably due to not reading the actual rules.

      Also, you cannot use the same device for PMR and ham radio bands, the PMR device needs to be certified for PMR use, that means that it can only transmit on pmr frequencies and nowhere else. Other devices (eg. ham radio) cannot be used on PMR frequencies.

      It's not FUD, it's regulation which exists for good reason, because in cases of actual emergencies, trained ham operators can assist actual emergency services with communication, and that's impossible if every idiot with a baofeng jams the channels.

      • elevation 21 hours ago

        > I have no idea where people got the myth of not needing a licence in emergencies, probably due to not reading the actual rules.

        Parent is referring to the “Safety of life and protection of property” rule [0].

        [O]: https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-47/chapter-I/subchapter-D...

        • misteriji2 18 hours ago

          > No provision of these rules prevents the use by an amateur station of any means of radiocommunication at its disposal to provide essential communication needs in connection with the immediate safety of human life and immediate protection of property when normal communication systems are not available.

          This rules applies to:

          > the use by an amateur station

          Not every billy and bobby with a baofeng are an amateur station.

          Luckily, at the beginning of part 97 there are definitions of such words (you have to open the full document, not just this article)

          > Amateur station. A station in an amateur radio service consisting of the apparatus necessary for carrying on radiocommunications.

          So, for something to be an "amateur station", you need an "apparatus" (some kind of radio transmitter) and it has to be a part of "amateur radio service". That too is defined in the same document:

          > Amateur radio services. The amateur service, the amateur-satellite service and the radio amateur civil emergency service.

          It's not RACES (that's defined below), not satellite, so let's see what "amateur service is", again, definition in the same document

          > Amateur service. A radiocommunication service for the purpose of self-training, intercommunication and technical investigations carried out by amateurs, that is, duly authorized persons interested in radio technique solely with a personal aim and without pecuniary interest.

          So, for that rule to apply, you need a device (an apparatus), that has to be used for self-training etc (read above), for noncommercial, personal aim by a licenced ("duly authorized") person. Only then can you break other rules (eg power limits) in situations described in rule 403 you linked above.

          Without a licence, a radio is just a radio, eg. a business band radio (like many motorolas are), and nothing in the part 97 (regulating amateur radio) applies to the user of that radio. Only when a licenced ham uses that (or any other radio, or even a homemade transmitter), in a specific way (described above) that "just-a-radio" becomes an amateur station.

      • nunobrito a day ago

        Again with FUD.

        In Portugal you are legally permitted to use channel 9 (27.065 MHz) in addition to the PMR channels. The hard line has always been on public safety bands. From a long time cooperation with the authorities (especially around the Azores) there was always an informal permission for that kind of usage across boats and islands because communication is difficult there.

        Last but not least: taking the radio license exam is NOT a drama. Anyone can apply and get the radio license when they are serious into this topic.