Meshtastic is an open-source project using low cost LoRa radios as a long range off-grid communication platform in areas without little or no communications infrastructure. It’s a portmanteau of Mesh and “fantastic”.

I found it shared on Facebook, which lead me to the subreddit post, which lead me to reading more about it and even finding Lemmy communities and local groups!

https://mander.xyz/c/meshtastic

I also made sure to check if this wasn’t a hail corporate thing. And I also felt like I missed the era of homemade radios. So this is exciting for me!

  • Cyberflunk@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    We have a 14 node mesh in our town, I have never met any of the other owners. Wait till you learn about ATAK

      • Cyberflunk@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        I guess I assumed they’d go off and search on their own…

        Here’s a field-friendly primer tying together CivTAK/ATAK, MeshTastic, and HALO—three technologies that often orbit the same conversations about civilian coordination, comms, and mapping.

        CivTAK / ATAK

        What it is:

        • ATAK = Android Team Awareness Kit. Originally military, now with a civilian fork called CivTAK.
        • Core feature is a shared map with live team positions, annotations, and collaboration tools.
        • Functions as a situational awareness (SA) platform—imagine Google Maps supercharged with multiplayer coordination.

        Strengths:

        • Handles offline maps, topo layers, GIS data.
        • Plugin ecosystem (search & rescue tools, drone integration, wildfire overlays).
        • Flexible networking: LTE, Wi-Fi, radios, or mesh.

        Civilian Role: Used by SAR teams, disaster relief groups, event organizers, and outdoor adventurers.

        MeshTastic

        What it is:

        • An open-source mesh radio project. Small LoRa (long-range, low-bandwidth) radios form a network to pass messages between nodes without cell towers or internet.
        • Think of it as walkie-talkies for text data—your phone connects via Bluetooth, and MeshTastic devices relay the packets.

        Strengths:

        • Long range in rural/open terrain (tens of kilometers with line of sight).
        • Extremely low power usage, can run for days on a small battery.
        • Ideal for grid-down, remote, or off-grid comms.

        Civilian Role: Hiking groups, neighborhood emergency preparedness, off-road expeditions, community mesh networks.

        Connection to ATAK:

        • With plugins, ATAK can use MeshTastic radios as a data transport layer to sync positions and markers even without cell service.

        HALO

        What it is:

        • HALO (Hazardous Awareness and Location of Operations) is a TAK server implementation designed for civilian organizations.
        • Basically the “cloud hub” for CivTAK/ATAK, handling data distribution, group management, and persistent mapping.

        Strengths:

        • Acts as the glue—users running CivTAK/ATAK connect to HALO for centralized comms.
        • Provides persistence: maps, chat logs, annotations survive beyond a single session.
        • Supports mixed networks—cellular users, Wi-Fi, and mesh nodes can all sync via HALO.

        Civilian Role: Deployed by NGOs, SAR orgs, and local emergency groups to keep coordination structured.

        How They Fit Together

        Picture a search-and-rescue mission:

        1. CivTAK/ATAK is the app interface—team members see each other’s positions, hazards, search grids.
        2. MeshTastic provides the off-grid comms backbone if cell coverage is down—nodes bounce data until it reaches everyone.
        3. HALO acts as the mission control hub, syncing everyone’s data and maintaining the “source of truth.”

        Together, these tools give civilians a command-and-control capability once limited to militaries—but at low cost and with open-source/community-driven energy.

        Civilian Ops Tech Primer: Quick Comparison

        Tool Role What It Does Strengths Typical Use
        CivTAK / ATAK Platform (the app/interface) Android app for real-time maps, team tracking, and collaboration. Powerful mapping, plugins, works with many networks. Search & Rescue, disaster response, event coordination, outdoor group safety.
        MeshTastic Transport (the radio network) Open-source mesh radios using LoRa to pass text/position data phone-to-phone via Bluetooth. Works off-grid, long range, low power, cheap hardware. Off-grid messaging, team position sync in no-signal areas, neighborhood comms.
        HALO Server / Hub Central TAK server for syncing users, maps, data, and managing persistence. Acts as “mission control,” supports mixed connections (cell, Wi-Fi, mesh). NGOs, SAR teams, emergency groups needing a shared source of truth.

        How They Work Together

        • CivTAK/ATAK = the cockpit (what you see and interact with).
        • MeshTastic = the radio link (how data moves when cell towers fail).
        • HALO = the headquarters (where all info is stored, managed, and synced).

        In practice:

        • A SAR team in the mountains uses MeshTastic radios to pass position updates.
        • Each rescuer’s phone shows the shared map through CivTAK/ATAK.
        • Back at the operations center, HALO aggregates everything, letting coordinators direct the search with a reliable, persistent map.
        • ggtdbz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 days ago

          I’ve gone down parts of this rabbit hole (reading, not implementation). Wish I could guarantee that I could set anything up (including just setting up Meshtastic nodes in fun places) without getting arrested for setting up what can only look like an espionage infrastructure network to the government.