So it's not offline first, and even though it can do P2P through WebRTC I've ran into situation where I wanted to send a file from my android (not supporting AirDrop) phone to someone's iphone (not supporting Nearby Share) when we were both at the same location but days away from cell service.
Localsend can do that. Problem being when the other person did does not have that installed on their phone. It's really crazy how offline-first networking is still partitioned by iPhone/Android for so many years.
Yeah, it's crazy how with a $15 walkie talkie running on AAA batteries you can talk to your friend miles away in the wilderness, but your $1000 phone is a brick if it can't see a cell tower. Something went wrong there.
Pretty soon we're going to have satellite cell service via Starlink. So it will work, but it will be silly when your signals are going to space and back twice to travel a mile as the crow flies.
Your comment led me to searching "Walkie Talkie Mesh" and it turns out it is a thing. Apparently 20 mile radius, 100+ devices, but at an eye-watering price. Getting one for you and your 4 closest friends will run you the price of a Mitsubishi Mirage.
Retevis also now has RB24, a lora based mesh radio that does voice, but the details are very sparce.
The system claims to do up to 32 hops, which has potential for some very decent range with a large enough population.
Exactly and more generally it'd be interesting to see if those space cell tower live to the promise. I suspect they'd be great for texting and very light web pages but with 7 Mbit/s per cell (that's the number I remember reading) it might end up feeling feel very sluggish if used with our existing internet applications and protocol stack.
I've recently had to move a few dozen MBs over Bluetooth and it took several minutes, so this barely counts. AirDrop is artificially limited to Apple devices, as is Google's thing to Google Android. Basically a brick.
> Yeah, it's crazy how with a $15 walkie talkie running on AAA batteries you can talk to your friend miles away in the wilderness, but your $1000 phone is a brick if it can't see a cell tower. Something went wrong there.
right? And it's almost unbelievable that a $150 bike can travel hundreds of miles in the wilderness, but a $30000 car becomes a brick the moment it runs out of gas.
Localsend can do that. Problem being when the other person did does not have that installed on their phone. It's really crazy how offline-first networking is still partitioned by iPhone/Android for so many years.