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Part 2:
(Continued from the post)
What's the Next Step?
I started touching on some imagined future steps, but this chunk is already a plenty big and ambitious thing. So, here's an initial plan for how I want to attack taking first steps and bring myself into contact with the engineering reality (as opposed to the rosy broad picture). Hopefully at the end of this chunk of work, the vision will have adapted somewhat to the reality of what's useful, what's possible, what the community's feedback is, what the issues and problems involved are, etc.
(And, obviously, I want to communicate with the Lemmy devs to make sure these ideas are in line with their vision. I'm laying this all out so extensively partly so that the community has a full explanation of what I'm proposing to do and why.)
So, first steps: I'm making a Lemmy instance that I can use for implementing this. I'm waiting for my hosting to go up so I can make it live, but once it's up, I'll start working on it + posting from the testbed about what's going on. My initial coding task list is:
Set up the peer software with the content-addressable store
Start to have my instance do peer discovery, make the app that runs in people's browsers from my instance become more AJAX-y and begin to request data from the peers instead of the instance.
Once that part's working on my instance, I'd aim to be able to move pieces of the actual app onto the peers -- construct the bootstrap code, continue the AJAX-ification of the code on my Lemmy instance, and have the bootstrapping app construct the end-user application directly from data from the peers.
Start to tackle the browser app making updates to the data store via requests to the peers, which will involve a lot of work and lot of sorting out replication issues, security and trust issues, and performance issues.
That's already a fairly large amount to take on. I have further ideas about how the system could move forward from there, but even just that represents (1) an ambitious thing to tackle (2) significant proposed changes to the instance software (3) if it works, a fantastically useful tool that instance operators could use to reduce their instance load if they want to. So, I'm limiting the plan to that much for now until I get some contact with the technical reality and with the community.
What You Can Do
So if you've read to the end, maybe you think this is a good idea. Want to help? This is a bunch of work already and I'd love it if people wanted to help get it done. Leave a comment, let me know what you think whether positive or negative, and if you want to help, 100% reach out and let's get it done. I'm skilled with software engineering in general, but I'm actually not too familiar in particular with web backends and AJAX, so someone more skilled than I am could probably help this along in a huge way. Specific things that might be useful:
If you want to run a peer or instance and help test the system
If you can help with coding
If you have feedback on these ideas in general, either positive or else things I've overlooked or need to adjust
Hope to hear from you and thank you for reading my wall of text. Let me know what you think + cheers to you.
I got a spare raspberry pi set up as a server. I can use that to host stuff and am okay in programming (not rust though). Let me know if I can be of assistance in anyway. Be happy to help with this effort