Kindergarten-age children in Arkhangelsk, the Soviet Union, 1968
Kindergarten-age children in Arkhangelsk, the Soviet Union, 1968
And here in Tokyo we're struggling with the process kick-start
Like we have several enthusiasts but it's definitely not enough to cover an appropriate space, it's a shame for a 40 million city to have 5 nodes
So... you basically need just two things:
Now, jokes aside...
I think it was almost the same for me. For a long time there was almost nobody. Then we were talking to our friends, then they were talking about it with their friends...
Big help was the fact that we had cellular shutdowns. Also several local medias (i.e. 1, 2) in different cities covered Meshtastic. Then one of popular Russian popular science content creators covered it in one of his videos on YouTube which were watched 1.7M times already.
So Meshtastic population in our area started to grow.
I think one of the largest boosts was that a local group chat was created in Telegram and announced in Telegram Russia group chat, so people from my city and it's outskirts started to gather in a single place.
So I joined it too and wrote a bunch of "Quick Start Guide" posts like:
925.675. So you're somewhat more in luck than us since most of high frequency nodes come with ~915-920 MHz antennas which should work well enough for you mostly. But finding well-tuned antennas for your region could be beneficial too.I asked local chat admin to pin them which he did, so new users were able to see them when they join.
I also set up an MQTT server for local community so we could link districts which are out of reach by radio from each other.
When community is thin, it's important to let them connect to each other even if they can't reach directly. So it was a good help. Of course, I've added MQTT settings to the "Quick Start Settings" post, so each new member with Wi-Fi-enabled node could connect their neighborhood to the mesh.
Then I recorded a podcast episode which covers everything that posts above covered and a lot more giving practical advices and sharing experience. If you need my plan for the podcast, you can find it here (you'll need to use translation though). But you may find some useful links and structure there.
Currently I'm vibe-coding a cross-platform desktop Meshtastic client app which could be used for stationary home and other types of nodes.
So for me it was basically about actively sharing experience, helping and creating content.
And AFAIU you've already got quite a mesh all over the Arkhangelsk, so can you provide some advice about starting the community?
Yeah, I'm glad that over a year our city started looking like this (see attachment image) instead of an empty map.
And also do you have some info on hardware in English?
Ah well. For that I'd recommend to look at Meshtastic Wiki. It is a good start for you.
But for newcomers, I'd suggest doing what I did and writing step-by-step guides and curated lists of easy-to-start hardware options. So new users wont' buy unsupported or glitchy boards, or ones working on a wrong frequency, et cetera.
I think your experience might be very useful here
Not sure about that, but if it helps, then I'm glad.
UPD: before re-using my device lists or antenna recommendations, please verify that they're are either compatible with your frequencies too or have versions for your region.
#Meshtastic #Arkhangelsk #popularization #experience #social #people #Telegram #community
Кстати, а вот вам и тот самый федерач, который ВНЕЗАПНО обнаружился в Архангельске.
Знакомьтесь, @iowoof (справа).