Hi guys,
Thank you for your input.
For this project we are following an emergent design.
The idea is to have the bare minimum implemented for communities to
install and uninstall, enable and disable... So we can work together
through experimentation to find out the most valuable features and make
them added earlier.
We are focusing on some community networks... If your community wants to
participate on the design process, please right to me in private and
tell me about the community. That will allow us to prioritize.
Bruno , great that you want to contribute by coding... Let's talk in
private, shall we? So we can organize ourselves,
On June 1, 2017 5:49:03 PM GMT+03:00, bruno vianna <bruno(a)pobox.com> wrote:
3) Codes expire and get recycled, yes?
I think the codes should be long enough so that we keep
creating them
and never have to recycle.
Why? For programming reasons? For ease of use in a particular case?
With 5 characters, that's probably enough (11,881,376), and with
7 definitely enough (8,031,810,176) to never repeat on that network.
Would it save processor energy on the router? Or maybe it would
fill up memory on the router?
I think it would be easier if you don't have to keep track of
expired vouchers, but I guess it's question for the coders.
7) When a voucher expires, keep the code reserved in
the system for
10% of the time it was valid, in case the person wants
to renew the
voucher. Examples:
-- A 1 hour voucher of a library/ciber visitor expires,
and they
have a 6-minute grace period to request another hour on
their
voucher. The admin interface makes extending the
voucher easy.
-- A 1 month voucher has a 3-day grace period. The
device doesn't
have access once the voucher expires, but renewing is
easy: the
admin doesn't have to create a new voucher, and the
person doesn't
have to enter a new code.
Are you thinking of an online payment system to get the
vouchers? Then
perhaps the access to the merchant page could be always open
(filter by
domain). Or the merchant page could be in the captive
portal, which is
always accessible.
Money in Caimito is all cash, with an occasional check, and no
cards or online payment so far. I can imagine some tourists
paying by card or some online system if it were available. Some
(maybe most) of the people here don't even have bank accounts
(beyond the Caimito community bank). I can imagine a community
currency being created and used to pay for Internet access.
Yes, most of the communities I work with will use cash instead of
plastic. I just got curious because if that is the case, how can you
extend the voucher just by the admin interface? The user will go
physically to the admin and pay him? I was thinking more of the case
where the admin might not be available, and it will be faster for
the user to get a new voucher from a local shop. I think it's very
interesting to understand the different scenarios of community
networks.
A community currency would be awesome, and I wonder how can the
local network be a facilitator for it - blockchains running on routers?
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