This may seem a bit crazy... but hear me out. #584
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whats the question then |
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I don't say "10/10 project" lightly btw. I normally give projects at most a 7 or 8. (Which is better than a 6 or a 7, but sometimes I give projects 6 or below as well.) This is genuinely impressive, because it gives you the ability to access all the info you might need in an offline manner - for completely free. Compare this to those 200$ doomsday boxes or whatever - they are just small computers with software and hardware needed. Here, you can install this free (as in price) software on an old laptop and it just works. Amazing. |
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Also - lined the storage backpack in tin foil in case of an EMP. But ya'll can use imagination for that. :) |
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Update: to no fault of NOMAD my chromebook died. installing on thinkpad. |
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Every day it seems more and more countries are restricting internet access. Can't help but wonder "what if mine is next? how will i get important info? how will i teach the future generation if i decide to have kids?" Project N.O.M.A.D. can't quite work miracles, but is dead-easy to learn, open source, and overall a great, great project. I installed NOMAD on an old Chromebook (I think it's a Samsung Chromebook 3 intel version running MrChromebox's distro of Coreboot. I know this likely unsupported as all heck, but it was the only thing x86_64 i had to spare.) and got a incomplete score from the benchmark failing, but it was somewhere in the 20s. Again, not a miracle worker, but I am shocked it ran at all.
10/10 project.
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