> On 11 Jun 2019, at 13:34, serge.stinckw...@gmail.com wrote: > > I would like something like that for Pharo images. Can you sync > files.pharo.org <http://files.pharo.org/> on ipfs ? >
Yes, that would be the first step. We could even use this: https://blog.cloudflare.com/distributed-web-gateway/ > Sent from my iPhone > > On 11 Jun 2019, at 17:00, Marcus Denker <marcus.den...@inria.fr > <mailto:marcus.den...@inria.fr>> wrote: > >> >> >>> On 6 Jun 2019, at 19:37, Serge Stinckwich <serge.stinckw...@gmail.com >>> <mailto:serge.stinckw...@gmail.com>> wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>> On Thu, Jun 6, 2019 at 6:35 PM Konrad Hinsen <konrad.hin...@fastmail.net >>> <mailto:konrad.hin...@fastmail.net>> wrote: >>> Hi everyone, >>> >>> Over the last weeks I have started to explore IPFS more seriously. >>> IPFS, the Inter-Planetary File System, is supposed to be the >>> next-generation Web: a decentralized content-addressed database. >>> >>> Since there is nothing better then Pharo for exploring databases, >>> I have started to write an IPFS interface to Pharo: >>> >>> https://github.com/khinsen/ipfs-pharo >>> <https://github.com/khinsen/ipfs-pharo> >>> >>> It connects to a local IPFS server, so you have to have one >>> running. It's surprisingly straightforward to install and configure, >>> unless you have to fight with firewalls that block IPFS traffic. >>> >>> >>> Great work ! I think Marcus was interested to have something like that. >> >> yes! >> >> IPFS has nice properties for many things… e.g. one simple things to try is >> to distribute images via IPFS… it has all the >> propose of Bittorrent for that. Imagine your case in Africa… very nice for >> that already. >> >> >> Marcus