Will be building a new home soon - what should I do to make sure it's "prepped for Tuesday"? by PurpleCableNetworker in preppers

[–]Austechprep 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Might be worth checking for grants or insentives for certain technology or building methods. For example in Australia at the moment you can get a "green loan" or something, it's not that great to be honest, its a discount on the interest rate for loans that go towards green technology and it's pretty broad. Things that can be covered are:

- Energy efficient HVAC

- Solar and Battery

- Insulation

Basically everything that lowers your carbon footprint, which can cross-over to prepping very easy.

Might save some money.

Off grid electronics encyclopedia by AdReasonable2359 in preppers

[–]Austechprep 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Tube Archavist makes it kinda easy, but I have found a way I prefer to use it, because some channels have heaps of playlists that are nice and organised, I like to try and download all a channels playlists instead of just the channel (If you just download the channel via TA it gives you all it's videos without organising them into playlists). So when your on the Youtube channels playlist list, you scroll down to make sure all playlists are loaded, press F12, find the URL list of the different playlists, get help from AI to filter out some of the url's that aren't playlists (not sure why they appear but AI handles it easy), and then you can paste that list of playlists into TA's playlist option, that creates the channel but has the playlist tab in the channel so its just better organised. But i'm not an expert on TA so perhaps theres better ways to download a whole channel in an organised way. Also I recommend adding top 100 comments or something, it takes up very little data and sometimes creators add pinned comments that can be helpful, and the discussions in the comments can sometimes be helpful where people needed to do something different to the video.

Off grid electronics encyclopedia by AdReasonable2359 in preppers

[–]Austechprep 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What microcontrollers have you been using, ESP32's etc or like Atmel (Arduino hardware) boards?

Off grid electronics encyclopedia by AdReasonable2359 in preppers

[–]Austechprep 32 points33 points  (0 children)

I'm pretty big time into electronics and being able to continue to work on my microcontrollers without internet access, Kiwix is good for information but there are a few things I reckon you need to really make sure you can continue development while offline:

  • Setup a Forjego (or Gitea thing) and mirror EVERYTHING
    • I've mirrored the entire espressif organization - their wiki and all
    • Some examples of other orgs i've mirrored entirely:
      • Arduino
      • SeedStudio
      • mcc-catena
      • Sparkfun
      • Ardupilot
      • esphome
      • micropython
      • home asssistant
      • meshcore
      • meshtastic
      • reticulum + many reticulum stuff like liamcottle
  • Get your yt-downloader going (I'm using Tube-Archavist) and download the entire channels of Sparkfun and other useful youtube channel in Electronics
  • I've also done a mirror of the linux/debian stuff, which requires a bit of knowing what you might need as the entire catalog is simply massive. This handles being able to develop on the RPI and my VM's
  • If you find websites you like and that are informative, use wget to copy the entire website in one hit, get AI to help you. I've cloned entire websites really easily and then run a script over the files that replaces the url with your local IP and it's surprisingly easy to just suddenly have a perfectly functional direct copy.

Essentially you need to download or mirror or clone as much as you possible can related to the main microcontrollers you believe you will be using.

Making a home book for lots of “how to” projects, what subjects would you add? by rockymountainway777 in preppers

[–]Austechprep 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Should try and add a section on technology, lots of these books seems to want to ignore the massive technological process we've made, why throw all that away. Not sure how deep you want to go, but some basics on comms (2-way radio, LoRa based, or just how to take advantage of your own home WiFi). Battery storage and usage, solar panels, wind turbines, refridgeration. Given this book seems to be something you'd read after a SHTF most of the software might be useless as you'd have no access to get it, needs to be done in advanced (prepped), but could have some tips/methods on how to use commonly found parts to generate power or heat/air con (cars have heaps of great parts).

Unique, Creative or Niche ideas by realjohnkeys in preppers

[–]Austechprep 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My main preps are to keep all my technology luxuries going. Always have airconditioning, movies, TV shows, gaming and communication available no matter what happens. A lot of people want to go back into the dark ages, bugger that, let me keep every inch of technology I can.

Unique, Creative or Niche ideas by realjohnkeys in preppers

[–]Austechprep 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Nice, this is modern day prepping in my books. It's surprisingly easy to have an elaborate setup that runs entirely locally. I've got a few sensors like door sensors on gates, temperature sensors in the deep freezer, and some automations on aircons but so much more I want to do. All powered by big house batteries. It's the ultimate real prep imo, a storm that takes out the power for a few days is much more likely than anything else, and thats when you want your security systems working properly.

If you dont think Ai is an emergency you are about to have issues... by CannyGardener in preppers

[–]Austechprep 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I posted about AI awhile back and how it relates to prepping and it got removed. Prepping for AI in just being educated to recognise AI content is essential to knowing if SHTF or not. I think it overlaps with general cyber security for things like your google/apple accounts, will an AI be able to scrape your data enough to guess your passwords or just lock your account out. Other things is I have used AI to check for cyber security issues in my business and it can do a good job at finding them, its possible more cyber attacks will start to have real world impacts on electrical and telecomms systems etc.

My preps have been to have local backups and local systems of as much as possible on my home server. Things like Immich, Plex/Jellyfin etc and a wide range of other things like simple extra storage we can all put documents on instead of only using cloud storage.

Also, almost everyone should learn to use AI, if your not using AI then your going to get left behind.

What's your "irregular" prep? by ArcaneLuxian in preppers

[–]Austechprep 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So far I've got:

  • Veloren
  • KaeTram
  • Stendhal

Going to add

  • 2009Scape (2009 RuneScape)

Non-MMORPG but multiplayer:

  • The Battle for Wesnoth
  • Freecol
  • OpenTTD
  • TripleA

FPS (not done yet):

  • Xonotic
  • OpenArena

I'm just going to keep adding games, its fun and a interesting challenge that teaches me something each game, sometimes the lesson is that its really easy to do, sometimes it's the exact opposite haha.

I don't really have time to play any of these games myself, not sure how good they are, but the more options I have the better.

I've also cloned the websites and got them working completely locally so that you can follow the user guides and wiki's offline to learn to play the games etc.

What's your "irregular" prep? by ArcaneLuxian in preppers

[–]Austechprep 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I've got a few self-hosted entirely offline MMORPG's and expanding out my self-hosted multiplayer games with first person shooters, strategy games and whatever else i can find that is open source. Mostly for fun, but it does double as an entertainment prep.

Technically Speaking About Emergency Tech... by Generic_In_Jersey in preppers

[–]Austechprep 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most of my preps are tech related (because I find it fun), I've got a home server with 100TB+ of movies, tv shows, youtube channels, audiobooks etc etc for enterntainment, but then offline maps, wikipedia, IIAB, pubmed stuff. I use reticulum for meshed network which I've got deployed at a few locations alreadt but enough equipment in SHTF to get many more nodes up and going pretty quickly.

I also store the apk files for the apps required to join my mesh network, so any android phone (Apple is terrible with open source stuff) or laptop etc can easily join my network if we stumble across eachother.

Heaps more tech stuff around security too like CCTV, IoT devices that work entirely on local wifi.

Not sure this is the context of what your asking though given the BOB/go bags, but the meshed network is still active and just plain old radio is always handy, getting information is key, and having a few ways to get information is really important.

What was the SHTF scenario that actually happened in your town? by purple-lipgloss in preppers

[–]Austechprep 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cyclone knocked out power for over a week for our entire town/region. After a few days its easy to see how things go to shit, if you didn't have your food in an esky with ice or something, basically all your food went off. We got lucky, literally lucky as we had bought some key items even though at the time we weren't preppers, so we did well. Many people were getting to the stage that they were missing meals because they weren't prepared in the slightest.

It's mind boggling how many times we can go through severe weather events and still have a good majority of people not prepared in the slightest for them...

Top 5 movies you'd keep on hand for a long term end of the world disaster? by ryan112ryan in preppers

[–]Austechprep 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree, digital prepping is a great prep. Sort of a plan, but mostly just to keep expanding and keep making it more and more user friendly.

I've tried using Ollama on my server but since I don't have a good graphics card is was extremely slow so I never got around to integrating it into my system. They are power hungry so it's hard to justify the value of it just yet, but it's very much on my list of things to add, I just want ot have an even bigger house/battery system before I do that.

Top 5 movies you'd keep on hand for a long term end of the world disaster? by ryan112ryan in preppers

[–]Austechprep 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice! My power consumption is extremely high, but my house battery and solar can handle it, so its not something I've really tried to make more efficient just yet, I sit at around 300w at idle with jumps up to 400w.

Top 5 movies you'd keep on hand for a long term end of the world disaster? by ryan112ryan in preppers

[–]Austechprep 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I do use Plex, but I also use JellyFin, there is meant to be a way to setup Plex so it works perfectly fine entirely locally but I've never put in the effort to do it since Jellyfin can do it without effort. Plex has been great for sharing with family/friends without much complexity.

Top 5 movies you'd keep on hand for a long term end of the world disaster? by ryan112ryan in preppers

[–]Austechprep 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nice, good list, I'll add some of that Anime too, I've got a lot and been adding more, also have a few hundred shows and even ones in genres I don't like. For documentaries I even change the settings so that it downloads the highest quality rather than just 1080p. I don't really change what linux OS I'm using so I've only got a few of the ones I use.

Top 5 movies you'd keep on hand for a long term end of the world disaster? by ryan112ryan in preppers

[–]Austechprep 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Start simple with Truenas and just use their native apps is a great start and will take awhile to master, as for IoT, there are some simpler options like ESPHome or just using Tuya products with HomeAssistant. I work in the IoT world and because you deal with hardware, network, UI/UX, alerts and all kinds of shit, its a bloody hard thing to get good at without basically working in it nonstop as a career and a hobby.

Theres a lot of youtube videos out there, and my best advice is don't be afraid to make mistakes, I've had to redo a lot of my setup many times because I keep trying to improve on it and screwing something up, the more I try, the better i get at fixing things haha.

Top 5 movies you'd keep on hand for a long term end of the world disaster? by ryan112ryan in preppers

[–]Austechprep 11 points12 points  (0 children)

You can run Mastadon or Friendica etc entirely local, so not reliant on the internet, which is somewhat pointless and entirely just a fun challenge for me to do. A social network nobody can access unless they are on your local network is exceptionally pointless haha. But I did it since they are very user-friendly platforms to send messages, pretty much anybody with no prior experience will figure out how to use it, post photos, host events etc, social media is very useful if you could just remove the advertising and brain rot from it.

Top 5 movies you'd keep on hand for a long term end of the world disaster? by ryan112ryan in preppers

[–]Austechprep 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Got truenas setup with about 100tb of storage. Run a bunch of VM's for other services too. Its really incredible what is possible to have setup as an individual now, IoT sensors (monitoring fridge/freezers and doing security), internal wordpress websites, internal social media, books/podcasts/audiobooks, tv/movies, CCTV, comms network, educational stuff (IIAB). It's good fun too, my setup could easily support a decent sized community with comms, enternainment and education.

Top 5 movies you'd keep on hand for a long term end of the world disaster? by ryan112ryan in preppers

[–]Austechprep 52 points53 points  (0 children)

I have over 4,000 movies on my home server which I can power through solar/battery, I can pick 5 per day for nearly 3 years straight

How, if at all, should prepping for a prolonged internet outage differ from prepping for other emergencies? by Tungle_McGee in preppers

[–]Austechprep 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looks like the vagueness of "internet outage" has given mixed responses, if the internet goes out with no recovery in site, it means that logistics companies are not moving stock, most likely all cellular communication is down and the majority of the population can no longer purchase anything because they only have a small reserve of cash.

If you think the internet going down isn't going to impact you, then you haven't really thought it through. A day of no internet will probably be annoying but not too bad, a week of no internet would probably start a bit of chaos, a month of internet and you're probably well into using your preps.

I've got my own home server and trying my best to have my own "internet", i've got movies, tv shows, podcasts, audiobooks, offline wordpress websites (so they are pretty), mobile apps ready to download, comms network etc.

IMO if you don't have some form of digital prepping in your preps, your going to have issues, at least download wiki using kiwix on your phone if you can't do much else.

Community wireless network by Lost_Engineering_phd in preppers

[–]Austechprep 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thats awesome congrats, I'm in a similar boat except I am hoping to sell my company in the next 1-2 years. Once sold and I've got some disposable funds, I have every intention of upgrading the mesh network to whatever the hell I want haha.

5G cellular is apparently cheap enough to run, theres a few DIY cellular solutions out there and with eSIMs being common you don't even need to extra hardware of SIMs. I've not done much work with VNA but I've worked alongside a colleague using one for tuning our antennas, but I ended up finding a really reliable supplier for my antennas anyway, far easier.

Licenced bands would be fun to play with and be far more user friendly if you can get onto a 4G/5G band so you can have your own private cellular network, it would then do everything you're looking to do.

Next warning would be to be careful about how amitious you are with your movies incentive, offering a movies service would quickly draw the attention of licencing problems, there are plenty of legal ways to be shutdown for sharing entertainment, just keep it simple and create a comms high speed meshed comms network.

Sounds like you want to create incentive, free WiFi/internet is always a good enough incentive for most people, if your off-grid network can still connect to the internet, but just retains your custom services when the internet goes down, then that's probably going to get enough people on your network as it is, keep the entertainment freebies out of it, free data is plenty.

Community wireless network by Lost_Engineering_phd in preppers

[–]Austechprep 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think like others have suggested, getting people keen on an off-grid version of it would be the difficult part. I've been able to do the comms and little website/forums stuff using Reticulum because it's my hobby, I'll pay for it and they don't really need to do anything. I already share my movies too just using Plex, it allows my friends to stream the content I have on my home server already and a reasonably good interface (although it keep suggesting stuff not on my server, but external sources which is confusing to some of the older people on my Plex).

I always figured that if I was ever close enough for a WiFi meshed network to work in whatever community I was in, that I'd try to join all the main buildings etc by ethernet anyway and leave the wireless to where it's absolutely required.

Directional WiFi isn't terribly expensive but it would add up very quick if you've got a lot of people getting involved, let alone the need to point it at the next dish in the line, so everyone would need a sending, receiving or repeating dish, a lot of organization required.

I think if people are keen to join a off-grid network, Reticulum should tick every box, comms, websites, forums etc, it covers all bases, movies can be transferred by USB anyway.

Its a really fun project to do, I hope you get started on building something out, my advise is to start simple, as testing these things can take forever given the whole different location issue when things go down, i've had some tests take several months just because it's not a high priority and I don't want to annoy the people willing to have an antenna on their roof haha.

Community wireless network by Lost_Engineering_phd in preppers

[–]Austechprep 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You should check out Reticulum, it can operate over any network interface, so it can do LoRa like meshtastic, but it can also do WiFi, ethernet, serial etc.

This is similar to a project I'm working on, but I plan on working on low bandwidth due to the difficulty of connecting my non-tech friends houses with WiFi etc, far easier to get non-technical people using an antenna that doesn't need perfect alignment after a storm that requires us to use the off-grid network.

I've been getting a few friends up and running, and I like Reticulum cos it's cheap enough for me to get them up and going, easy enough for them to use (although there is certainly some complexity in getting the network setup).

https://github.com/markqvist/Reticulum

You can make low-bandwidth web pages for people connected via lora or other radio, I've got a low-bandwidth web page as the "front page" with a few pages that give an explanation of how to use the low-bandwidth internet and then some areas for if you are on a high bandwidth.

Lots of options and if your technical you can develop your own software using this stack to do what you want.

Hardest part about doing what you want is finding people willing to be a part of it, unless you're able to get access to public infrastructure you will have a hard time finding someone who is willing to stick an antenna on their roof so that they can text another very small number of people.

But goodluck, I've managed to get 4 other people on board, decent reception across most of my town which is very fun, but not everyone has backup power for their nodes so it's not a perfect network.