Project Nomad – Knowledge That Never Goes Offline

290 points - today at 12:28 PM

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wooptoo today at 8:00 PM
I come from a time when internet connectivity was not permanent. It was only available a few times per day when you connected via the phone line. My first ISP gave me an allowance of 20 hours of internet per month. You would dial-up, check the news, check your email, read a page or two, download what you had to download, and then disconnect. The internet was very slow by today's standards, and the connection would get lost very often. It was during that time when it was drilled into my head that the network access comes and goes. That it should not be taken for granted. So a lot of the stuff that I use nowadays, I also have in an offline format. I keep offline docs either in pdf or in html format of most of the programming languages and frameworks that I use. I keep the source code of various projects that are essential to me. I keep a local wiki with notes on various things that are useful to me. Obviously it's not enough for a major catastrophe but it's better than nothing. I'm by no means a prepper, but I also believe that each of us should be prepared for short term disruptions of various kinds. The network should not be taken for granted.
adsharma today at 4:12 PM
So this thing is based on Kiwix, which is based on the ZIM file format.

In the meanwhile, wikipedia ships wikidata, which uses RDF dumps (and probably 8x less compressed than it should be).

https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidata:Database_download

There is room for a third option leveraging commercial columnar database research.

https://adsharma.github.io/duckdb-wikidata-compression/

hamstergene today at 7:18 PM
Normally I cringe at doomsday preppers but given how many dictators out there love the idea to cut their country off Internet whenever anything starts going not in their favor, I imagine a lot of people may find this useful.

I wouldn’t want to lose access to knowledge how to fix a sink or which medication is better, just because the local kingface currently feels that free exchange of opinions about him threatens his kingship.

Animats today at 7:13 PM
There's a company which sells something like this, as "Prepper Disk".[1]

In the 1950s, US Civil Defense had a set of microfilms on how to rebuild society. These were packaged with a sunlight reader and stored in larger fallout shelters. Someone should find one of those.

[1] https://www.prepperdisk.com/

coretx today at 8:40 PM
Whats not in there ? Why ? Are the LLM's cencored ?
Yokohiii today at 3:48 PM
I like the idea of an LLM that acts as a public knowledge base. But that doomsday framing on the site is pretty annoying.
Lapra today at 4:33 PM
In a world where this is useful, you aren't going to be spending your precious battery on running an LLM...
cstaszak today at 5:41 PM
I'm a fan of "civilization in a box" kinds of projects. However the ZIM file format leaves a lot to be desired in 2026. I've been exploring a refreshed, alternative approach: https://github.com/stazelabs/oza

I do think having an LLM as an optional "sidecar" is a useful approach. If you can run a meaningful Ollama instance alongside your content, great!

nelsonic today at 6:27 PM
For anyone wanting the video explanation from the creator, watch: https://youtu.be/P_wt-2P-WBk
Aargau today at 7:04 PM
Closing on 40 acres in Panama for an eco-resort.

I was planning to build my own offline repository, but will check out this repo.

born-jre today at 8:13 PM
little off topic while i have like minded people reading this.

What if we build what i am calling WWTN (World wide text network). very low bit rate network that can at most send sms level data its a packet routing at lower level (possibly MAC addr is a hash of pub key of node like p2p networks work but fully p2p not ISP backed, censorship resistant. Reticulum + LORA + ... actually global.

someone come up with better name than WWTN tho

JanisIO today at 2:17 PM
Anyone thought about using a Steam Deck with this? Or explored the concept of a "Nomad Deck"?
WillAdams today at 1:48 PM
Missing a chance to note (or configure for?) installation on a Raspberry Pi --- that'd make an affordable option to leave powered down, but ready to go in an EMI-shield/Faraday Cage.
iandanforth today at 4:00 PM
I like this idea! I don't need the LLM bits, and want it to run on an old Android tablet I have lying around. Can anyone recommend similar software where I can get wikipedia / street maps / useful tutorial videos nicely packaged for offline use?
amarant today at 6:21 PM
>Knowledge That Never Goes Offline

>What is Project N.O.M.A.D.? Node for Offline Media, Archives, and Data

That's the first header, and the first sentence of the first paragraph, and I'm confused.

moffers today at 2:26 PM
Really clever targeting of a niche. I’d be interested to hear if they find success!
myself248 today at 1:48 PM
born-jre today at 7:35 PM
what a coincidence, i am just downloading 110gb wikipedia dump on kiwix right now
ZeroCool2u today at 4:37 PM
See I really want this in a simpler format. Like a single file embedded database on my filesystem that I can point a single/or few tools at for my model to use when it needs.
leowoo91 today at 5:27 PM
It could use some own wisdom not to use nodejs..
itintheory today at 5:31 PM
Why does it have to have AI? Ugh.
bpavuk today at 3:41 PM
turns out I have the same setup (sans local LLMs - they are pretty useless on 2018 cards) but in Obsidian :)

whatever I think might be useful later, I capture through the web clipper extension. [0]

[0]: https://obsidian.md/clipper

balkanist today at 6:53 PM
This is really cool. Having offline Wikipedia + local LLMs in a single bundle is a great combo for emergency preparedness. Do you have any benchmarks on how it performs on lower-end hardware? Curious about minimum specs.
deleted today at 3:19 PM
mohamedkoubaa today at 3:50 PM
Great premise for a science fiction story
shevy-java today at 2:44 PM
So how does that work?
tsss today at 1:31 PM
I was expecting the game from my childhood and was disappointed.
bamwor today at 7:09 PM
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codeveil today at 7:13 PM
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