Settings

Theme

Durin: A new mobile app for the IPFS network

blog.ipfs.tech

80 points by meandave 3 years ago · 19 comments

Reader

tuanm 3 years ago

Durin focuses on web3.storage gateway at this moment. AFAIK, using this provider requires the authorization for HTTP requests, also limits the storage usage, and ensures the content pinning feature. It doesn't seem to be a new thing added to the protocol but a mobile application supporting interacting with an IPFS gateway via HTTP requests. With current features I saw in Durin for Android, my uploaded content list isn't able to be synchronized across my devices. Anyway, it's prospective in bringing the protocol into mobile devices. Cannot wait to see how far we'll go.

outofpaper 3 years ago

This almost defeats the whole purpose of IPFS's automatic caching of resources. Using HTTP gateways is something anyone already can do in any browser and with a little work on the side of web devs can be done automatically. At the moment what's the point of using Durin?

  • aaomidi 3 years ago

    There’s always going to be a need for centralized services in decentralized systems.

    Email has it. Git has it.

    I can see a self hosted HTTP gateway with Durin being very useful.

jeroenhd 3 years ago

Opening an IPNS domain in this app just takes me to a public resolver (ipns.4everland.io) in my browser rather than doing any IPFS work on my phone. Not very exciting to be honest.

optimalsolver 3 years ago

Here for the name:

https://youtube.com/watch?v=uxfoa23skHg

hot_gril 3 years ago

I'm rarely interested in these things, but IPFS seems really nice as far as I've used it, and underrated too.

Was chatting with players of the niche open-source AssaultCube computer game, and turns out they have a not-so-great solution for custom map textures/models. Was thinking of dropping in an IPFS client for them.

  • jeroenhd 3 years ago

    My experience is that the network works well for popular files, but if you try to share a file that's not already cached and the other service doesn't use the exact same gateway you do, you're waiting forever to browse the content.

    My benchmark for this is sharing a file using the standard IPFS application and then trying to download it through either ipfs.io or Cloudflare's IPFS resolver. It usually took me about two or three timeouts before the file finally appeared and stayed available for a while. Direct IPFS to IPFS transfers using IPFS apps on both sides didn't seem to work well.

    The daemons also seemed real CPU heavy for some reason.

    It's a real shame, because I like the concept of the protocol. Maybe this approach of using an external, optimized pinning service wolves these problems, but that doesn't align with the goal of IPFS of course.

    • hot_gril 3 years ago

      I was pinning files with an inexpensive paid service, and it was pretty fast. I don't remember how well it worked when I was self-pinning. But yeah it did seem like it had some technical details to work out.

    • rjzzleep 3 years ago

      How is IPFS used in libgen?

xrd 3 years ago

It's fascinating that iOS safari works correctly but not Chrome. I always assume iOS Safari will be crippled for anything innovative. Another nail in the Google coffin.

transfire 3 years ago

Anyone use this yet?

  • meatjuice 3 years ago

    I’m using it and it’s more like a “client” for IPFS network. It’s nothing more than a list of HTTP gateways for IPFS. Good point is that it supports uploading, which might enable you to share files without using some other unreliable cloud storage services.

MadcapJake 3 years ago

Clicking links is taking me to my default browser.

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection