<oembed><type>rich</type><version>1.0</version><title>Juraj wrote</title><author_name>Juraj (npub1m2…lr8p9)</author_name><author_url>https://yabu.me/npub1m2mvvpjugwdehtaskrcl7ksvdqnnhnjur9v6g9v266nss504q7mqvlr8p9</author_url><provider_name>njump</provider_name><provider_url>https://yabu.me</provider_url><html>How to build a country wide Meshcore network&#xA;&#xA;0. See if you already have a community. If not, start it - website, meetups, ...&#xA;1. Get ham radio and rf enthusiasts on board. They know things you don&#39;t and it&#39;s much more difficult than just get a big antenna&#xA;2. Settle on frequency and parameters that work in the country. If don&#39;t know, EU narrow preset is good to start&#xA;3. Repeaters in line of sight, preferably on hills. Solar+battery powered nodes (we want the network to work when grid is down)&#xA;4. Monitor, communicate, test, tune&#xA;5. Meetups are good&#xA;6. Do all this before a revolution, before apocalypse &#xA;7. Get as many companion nodes as possible. Give them to family members - flashed and ready to go. &#xA;8. Use them daily to get a feel, see uncovered areas&#xA;9. Have fun! &#xA;&#xA;Note: I do not take credit for this anywhere, it&#39;s just what I&#39;ve observed others did. I have a shitty repeater in already well covered area, but hopefully I&#39;ll be able to set up and maintain a repeater in an uncovered area soon. &#xA;&#xA;</html></oembed>