From the home page: the Radicle stack builds on IPFS, and works without a centralized server. No hassle with setting up your own hosting, and no need to trust companies with your data.
From the home page: the Radicle stack builds on IPFS, and works without a centralized server. No hassle with setting up your own hosting, and no need to trust companies with your data.
Two things I've noticed when giving it a quick read: It looks like you need to be connected to the internet in order to use it, which is kind of odd. It does look like they are working on LAN only...
Two things I've noticed when giving it a quick read:
It looks like you need to be connected to the internet in order to use it, which is kind of odd. It does look like they are working on LAN only collaboration though, since it's in their FAQ.
One of the things I like about how Github/Gitlab work is the sort of project landing page they provide. If you want to start a project and get contributions from others, it makes it much easier when you immediately have a page with your readme where people can find it. I suppose for some projects this must not be as important as using distributed infrastructure.
From the home page: the Radicle stack builds on IPFS, and works without a centralized server. No hassle with setting up your own hosting, and no need to trust companies with your data.
The site is probably hosted on Google App Engine (it's like AWS).
Two things I've noticed when giving it a quick read:
It looks like you need to be connected to the internet in order to use it, which is kind of odd. It does look like they are working on LAN only collaboration though, since it's in their FAQ.
One of the things I like about how Github/Gitlab work is the sort of project landing page they provide. If you want to start a project and get contributions from others, it makes it much easier when you immediately have a page with your readme where people can find it. I suppose for some projects this must not be as important as using distributed infrastructure.