From alex at szlezak.com Thu Jul 2 15:51:23 2020 From: alex at szlezak.com (Alexander Szlezak) Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2020 15:51:23 +0200 Subject: [Battlemesh] Job posting best practice on mailing list Message-ID: <93178050-d12d-dd3a-314b-7a2e220beb6f@szlezak.com> Dear BattleMesh Members, I would like to post a few opensource/openwrt/linux networking related jobs. What is good practice or accepted policy to do so on the list today (I found some past discussions, but don't know if still up to date). Thanks, Alexander From zioproto at gmail.com Thu Jul 2 18:40:48 2020 From: zioproto at gmail.com (Saverio Proto) Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2020 18:40:48 +0200 Subject: [Battlemesh] Job posting best practice on mailing list In-Reply-To: <93178050-d12d-dd3a-314b-7a2e220beb6f@szlezak.com> References: <93178050-d12d-dd3a-314b-7a2e220beb6f@szlezak.com> Message-ID: AFAIK there is no policy :) Worst case we get some email traffic with people complaining :D Cheers Saverio Il giorno gio 2 lug 2020 alle ore 15:51 Alexander Szlezak ha scritto: > > Dear BattleMesh Members, > > I would like to post a few opensource/openwrt/linux networking related > jobs. What is good practice or accepted policy to do so on the list > today (I found some past discussions, but don't know if still up to date). > > Thanks, > > Alexander > _______________________________________________ > Battlemesh mailing list > Battlemesh at ml.ninux.org > https://ml.ninux.org/mailman/listinfo/battlemesh From alex at szlezak.com Thu Jul 2 21:32:50 2020 From: alex at szlezak.com (Alexander Szlezak) Date: Thu, 2 Jul 2020 21:32:50 +0200 Subject: [Battlemesh] Job posting best practice on mailing list In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: 😂 Got it. -- Alexander Szlezak +436601350410 > Am 02.07.2020 um 18:42 schrieb Saverio Proto : > > AFAIK there is no policy :) > Worst case we get some email traffic with people complaining :D > > Cheers > > Saverio > >> Il giorno gio 2 lug 2020 alle ore 15:51 Alexander Szlezak >> ha scritto: >> >> Dear BattleMesh Members, >> >> I would like to post a few opensource/openwrt/linux networking related >> jobs. What is good practice or accepted policy to do so on the list >> today (I found some past discussions, but don't know if still up to date). >> >> Thanks, >> >> Alexander >> _______________________________________________ >> Battlemesh mailing list >> Battlemesh at ml.ninux.org >> https://ml.ninux.org/mailman/listinfo/battlemesh > _______________________________________________ > Battlemesh mailing list > Battlemesh at ml.ninux.org > https://ml.ninux.org/mailman/listinfo/battlemesh From panos at nethood.org Mon Jul 6 14:29:41 2020 From: panos at nethood.org (panos nethood) Date: Mon, 6 Jul 2020 14:29:41 +0200 Subject: [Battlemesh] Meeting online with real people and without zoom :-) Message-ID: <418b31aa-de7a-7b9a-252d-a069a7030ec3@nethood.org> Hi all, As part of the 7at7 series, https://7at7.ch/, we try to experiment with the organization of hybrid meeting using existing equipment (good microphones and video cameras already available) and open source webconference tools like BigBlueButton. Tomorrow we will do our first experiment with a roundtable discussing exactly this topic, physically organized in L200*, but broadcasted live on a BBB room. See https://7at7.ch/july2020/ If this works well (you can help us to "stress test" the whole setup by joining), we would like to make a step further and do more symmetric events, e.g., a roundtable spanning more than one spaces. In this case a workshop with 20 people would need just 2-3 connections and thus less bandwidth, and less need to use commercial products like zoom, while the "breakout" rooms will be already set I know that this "linking of spaces" have been tried since the very first days of the Internet. But it still does not work "for the masses" (I think that one reason of the so called "zoom fatigue" is also the generally pool audiovisual quality of connections), perhaps because it was not so much needed until now. So, I think we should try harder (not only for Corona but also since we need to travel less anyway) Best, Panos. * L200 is a collective "hybrid" space in Zurich which many interesting design and governance issues. A related article has been recently published at the Journal of Peer Production: http://peerproduction.net/issues/issue-14-infrastructuring-the-commons-today-when-sts-meets-ict/peer-reviewed-papers/central-urban-space-as-a-hybrid-common-infrastructure/ -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: 0x2E81989F68793BA8.asc Type: application/pgp-keys Size: 3147 bytes Desc: not available URL: From zoobab at gmail.com Thu Jul 16 19:03:07 2020 From: zoobab at gmail.com (Benjamin Henrion) Date: Thu, 16 Jul 2020 19:03:07 +0200 Subject: [Battlemesh] Underwater wifi Message-ID: Hi, Just read this article about underwater WiFi on HaD: https://hackaday.com/2020/07/15/the-many-methods-of-communicating-with-submarines There was some presentation at WBM in Portugal about underwater communications: https://battlemesh.org/BattleMeshV9/Agenda?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=Underwater_electromagnetic_communications_INESC_TEC_battlemeshv9.pdf Best, -- Benjamin Henrion (zoobab) Email: zoobab at gmail.com Mobile: +32-484-566109 Web: http://www.zoobab.com FFII.org Brussels "In July 2005, after several failed attempts to legalise software patents in Europe, the patent establishment changed its strategy. Instead of explicitly seeking to sanction the patentability of software, they are now seeking to create a central European patent court, which would establish and enforce patentability rules in their favor, without any possibility of correction by competing courts or democratically elected legislators."