Mark - PyDECnet will work fine. If you are in CA, Bob's A2RTR is closest to you, he
may chime in. Or you can connect to PYRTR in MD that I maintain. Or both.
There seems to have been great leaps in packet data over amateur radio. Your situation
seems to be perfect for experiments there too. But another topic.
Let me know if you would like to connect to Uppsala via Maryland.
Best
/s
---
Supratim Sanyal, W1XMT
39.19151 N, 77.23432 W
QCOCAL::SANYAL via HECnet
On Mar 2, 2020, at 6:35 AM, Johnny Billquist <bqt
at softjar.se> wrote:
Hi.
On 2020-03-02 06:34, Mark J. Blair wrote:
No, I'm not complaining about intermittent connectivity with PyDECnet; I'm asking
if it's possible!
I don't have persistent Internet connectivity or a fixed IP address at my
just-barely-rural home. When my home network is connected to the Internet, it's
tethered over my cell phone. And even then, my cell service is spotty. I could possibly
resume using a separate hotspot at home rather than my regular cell phone, but even when I
was doing that, my connectivity wasn't great. Cell service in my neighborhood
isn't very good via either AT&T or Verizon, and wired connectivity is not
available.
Would any of the DECnet routing mechanisms supported by PyDECnet possibly be suitable for
intermittent connection of my home network, with a small number of DECnet nodes, to
HECnet? Or am I just going to have to remain a HECnet spectator until I manage to obtain
better Internet connectivity?
Yes. It is possible. If you use TCP as the transport, it can work with you having only
intermittent connectivity, and different addresses.
Paul Koning will have to tell if PyDECnet can also act as a listener from some arbitrary
remote system. But with RSX I can definitely do that. So if nothing else, you can always
set it up so that you connect your PyDECnet to an RSX host...
Johnny
--
Johnny Billquist || "I'm on a bus
|| on a psychedelic trip
email: bqt at softjar.se || Reading murder books
pdp is alive! || tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol