Hi all,
Welcome to the community I have formed to discuss various communications technologies. I wanted to discuss some of the new comms and information systems I have been personally setting up and how I’ve integrated them all into what I like to call my “C2 at home” setup.
Most recently I’ve gotten into meahtastic radios, which if you are not aware are a really cool, relatively new, kind of mesh radio that enables text style chat and location sharing across devices without reliance of cell infrastructure. They are very cheap, usually under $50 per radio, and you don’t need a HAM license to operate them wich is great. I swept up a few T-Beams off of lilygo and have setup a small network to talk with friends.
Now what’s really neat about these radios is that they integrate with ATAK using a plugin, which has enabled us to utilize ATAK together as a team on phones without having to worry about cellular data or hotspots, and without needing to worry about getting a license like with the older hammer plugin strategy with baofengs. OpenTAKServer, a free TAK server, also implements a meshtastic gateway tool into their platform, which lets devices link together to a server over the meshtastic protocol. I’ve combined all of this to build a small meshtastic network, with a laptop based, portable TAK server which can be deployed and setup anywhere, and then give me and my group a decent communications network anywhere.
There are certainly still some limitations to the LoRa protocol that meshtastic is built on, but overall I think its a very neat tool for people to know about so I wanted to share my own usage of the tool and hopefully start a discussion here that we can all learn more from,
Thanks!

Basically meshtastic is a widely available system used to send location data and texts between a local network of devices. This allows for texting and location sharing between people within a group without reliance on infrastructure like cell towers or wifi, so basically you can text and see your friends on a map without service. It’s pretty widely available across a few different devices from different manufacturers and you basically just need the device, and a phone to connect it to in order to get up a running.
End to end encryption capabilities?
Its the built in standard. And recently was upgraded to be even more secure
greatly appreciated, ig this will be my chance to jump into comms autism