Mercurial > hg > anonet-resdb
changeset 112:9fba60ff2ed3 draft
added a "see also" section to a2.o
author | Nick <nick@somerandomnick.ano> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 13 Aug 2010 20:49:44 +0000 |
parents | 9236e26e1346 |
children | 5100b1fb4f5c |
files | doc/www.anonet2.org/public_pod/index.pod |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 45 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/doc/www.anonet2.org/public_pod/index.pod Fri Aug 13 16:10:36 2010 +0000 +++ b/doc/www.anonet2.org/public_pod/index.pod Fri Aug 13 20:49:44 2010 +0000 @@ -86,6 +86,12 @@ =head2 How to Join +Disclaimer: If the following paragraph makes no sense to you, you can +join our webchat at L<http://webchat.kwaaknet.org/?c=AnoNet> to have a +real human help you get up and running in a hurry. It's a lot easier +(and not half as boring) to learn the technical details interactively, +once you're online. + Joining is pretty simple: If you know how to connect to a client port, UFO's CP (L<http://ix.ucis.nl/clientport.php> or L<http://www.qontrol.nl/anonet-cp.tgz>) will already @@ -162,9 +168,13 @@ That's not to say you'll have to build everything from scratch (and in fact, it's a bit too late for that, unless you want to I<re>build stuff that others have already built - and if you can do better than the -original, people will probably switch to your version), but if you want -to be happy here, you're best off bringing your creativity along rather -than leaving it behind when you join. +original, people will probably switch to your version), but if you want to +be happy here, you're best off bringing your creativity along rather than +leaving it behind when you join. (If you've been around darknets before, +you're probably quite familiar with "design by committee." On AnoNet, +you're more than welcome to invite a committee to discuss anything you +want, but you don't have to. If you already know what you're doing, +just "build it and they will come.") =head2 What You Can Do @@ -204,7 +214,7 @@ =item * -git (including a decentralized "wiki" replacement) (L<git://git1.somerandomnick.ano/>, L<http://anogit.ucis.ano/.git/>, L<git://1.22.48.100/>, L<git://pragmo.ano/>, L<git://1.0.18.1/>, and possibly other repos) +git (including a decentralized "wiki" replacement) (L<git://git1.somerandomnick.ano/>, L<http://anogit.ucis.ano/.git/>, L<git://1.22.48.100/>, L<git://pragmo.ano/>, L<git://1.0.18.1/>, L<git://1.0.111.1/>, and possibly other repos) =item * @@ -285,3 +295,34 @@ your Hotmail homepage. =back + +=head2 See Also + +If AnoNet sounds good but not perfect, don't despair: there are a number +of other projects that may interest you either instead of - or possibly +in addition to - AnoNet. + +=over + +=item dn42 - L<http://www.dn42.net/> + +dn42 is another highly decentralized darknet, and it's also quite +friendly. The main differences are that it doesn't claim anonymity as +a goal, and that it's significantly larger than AnoNet. A number of +AnoNet members are also active in dn42. + +=item VAnet - L<http://www.vanet.org/> + +VAnet is a strange animal. It's a highly I<centralized> darknet, making +the curious claim that centralization actually aids in privacy protection. +It's still quite small, but it should scale extremely well from a +technical perspective, due to its centralization. VAnet's official IRC +is part of the AnoNet IRC monster for now, so the easiest way to find out +more about VAnet is actually just to join AnoNet IRC and ask about VAnet. + +=item UCIS IX - L<http://ix.ucis.nl/> + +The UCIS Internet eXchange is an attempt to link a bunch of darknets +together. If you connect using UFO's CP, you're already on the UCIS IX. + +=back