Reticulum is a full replacement networking stack for several layers of the OSI stack, so not directly comparable. The LXMF messaging protocol (built on top of reticulum) is nice as it’s encrypted-by-requirement, but doesn’t really have a ton of non-text messaging implementations.
Reticulum is not worth getting into, the utilities and general infrastructure just isn’t there yet.
The project was basically a one-man-show for a long time, and has a lot of odd, esoteric decisions that will drive you mad if you’re actually trying to build something with it (eg, configuration files with sparse documentation that are yaml-but-not-really). I don’t mean to belittle the loads of time the original maintainer put into this project, it’s just not really designed to be usable in the general case by other developers.
I spent some time porting the reference Python implementation to no_std rust, but basically had to roll all the basic debugging utilities myself.
has anyone used reticulum and how does it compare to meshtastic (or even meshcore?)
Reticulum is a full replacement networking stack for several layers of the OSI stack, so not directly comparable. The LXMF messaging protocol (built on top of reticulum) is nice as it’s encrypted-by-requirement, but doesn’t really have a ton of non-text messaging implementations.
Reticulum is not worth getting into, the utilities and general infrastructure just isn’t there yet.
The project was basically a one-man-show for a long time, and has a lot of odd, esoteric decisions that will drive you mad if you’re actually trying to build something with it (eg, configuration files with sparse documentation that are yaml-but-not-really). I don’t mean to belittle the loads of time the original maintainer put into this project, it’s just not really designed to be usable in the general case by other developers.
I spent some time porting the reference Python implementation to no_std rust, but basically had to roll all the basic debugging utilities myself.