!planetsmolnet@lemmy.sdf.org
You published a thing? On the smolnet? Nice one! Here we can share stuff without worrying about things like whether it's "good writing" or if "anybody will care".
Please do:
Is it smolnet?
For this community posts should be hosted independently from Big Internet Services, should not have ads, and won't invite you to subscribe to the author's newsletter.
Yes: Public access UNIX, tildes, your blog on your VPS, ...
No: Medium, Substack, BlogSpot, bearblog ...
These guidelines are a first draft and will be updated as required.
!planetsmolnet
@lemmy.sdf.orghttps://thomask.sdf.org/blog/2023/11/11/autonomy-1-intro-and-backups.html
Douglas Adams once made this amusing observation about how we view technology: Anything that is in the world when you’re born is normal and ordinary and...
💌 manifesto
Email is just as bad as the Web. It's grown to be complex, secure only with other protocols bolted onto it, and it supports all the nasty misfeatures that the Web does, like cookies and tracking beacons. Even worse, it's seeing active hostility from the major players of the Internet. Most ISPs block traffic on port 25, and you can't deliver mail to any of the big names (like Gmail) without jumping through hoops - and even then, it's a coin toss.
I would love it if there was a way around this, a standard way for people interested in the small web to communicate. Something like Gemini, which can be grokked and implemented by one person. To that end, I've been working on a replacement - but I need some feedback.
📰 the details
I've written up specs for a protocol named Misfin, named after the Manned Space Flight Network (MSFN). It's spartan, but not overly so. It's only concerned with sending messages; mailbox management and relaying are out-of-band. Neither does it do much to combat spam - it probably won't be used by enough people to matter - but it avoids the worst of SMTP's security gotchas.
📝 the protocol: less is more
Maybe we should just worry about text. Maybe we don't want to accept big huge messages from strangers. Maybe we should be asking people nicely if they want to receive an attachment, rather than just sending it to them. Consider the following protocol. We send a single request, no more than 2048 bytes, and with an assumed mime of text/gemini:
misfin://mailbox@hostname.com Everything after this is the body of the message.\r\n
And the server tells us if it was accepted:
20 \r\n
Message sent, ezpz. Misfin is limited, but not crippled. Want to send a binary file? Throw it up on a Gemini server (you have one of those, yeah?) and link to it - you get the fingerprint of the receiver's certificate, so you could even gate it for them if it's eyes only. Can't fit your message into 2K? Send two, or maybe write less. (Most of the emails I got on the Gemini mailing list were smaller than that anyway).
🔭 but is there a better way
Maybe. That's why I need your feedback. Download the reference specification and shoot me a Misfin letter (!) at rfc@misfin.org
Or, make a ticket on Sourcehut, or Github, or post about it on Station. Up to you. But you could be the first to send me a Misfin letter...
https://thomask.sdf.org/blog/2023/09/09/memories-from-old-lan-parties.html
I participated in a lot of LANs in the 2000s, sometimes at private homes and sometimes at dedicated LAN venues. Many strange and wonderful things happened at...
gemini://ayushnix.com/gemlog/2023-08-13-pouncing-an-irc-bouncer.gmi
I wrote a blog post about setting up pouncer and calico to use as an IRC bouncer and improving the pouncer package in Alpine Linux.
https://www.feoh.org/posts/hacking-wetware-antipatterns
Hacking The Wetware - Antipatterns
I recently created a gemini capsule for myself and hosted it on my Raspberry Pi.
gemini://ayushnix.com
I came across a Wi-Fi issue in my OpenWrt router and made a gemlog post about it.
gemini://ayushnix.com/gemlog/2023-07-31-dynamic-frequency-selection.gmi
https://okasen.smol.pub/about
https://thomask.sdf.org/blog/2023/07/03/querying-unifi-channel-utilisation.html
I recently needed to do some optimisation work on a Ubiquiti UniFi setup. Some workloads were causing the capacity of a single AP to be exceeded, or more pre...
https://phroxy.z3bra.org/i-logout.cz:70/1/bongusta/