GitHub - Crosstalk-Solutions/project-nomad: Project N.O.M.A.D, is a self-contained, offline survival computer packed with critical tools, knowledge, and AI to keep you informed and empowered—anytime, anywhere.

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Project N.O.M.A.D. is a self-contained, offline-first knowledge and education server packed with critical tools, knowledge, and AI to keep you informed and empowered — anytime, anywhere.

Installation & Quickstart

Project N.O.M.A.D. can be installed on any Debian-based operating system (we recommend Ubuntu). Installation is completely terminal-based, and all tools and resources are designed to be accessed through the browser, so there's no need for a desktop environment if you'd rather setup N.O.M.A.D. as a "server" and access it through other clients.

Note: sudo/root privileges are required to run the install script

Quick Install (Debian-based OS Only)

sudo apt-get update && \
sudo apt-get install -y curl && \
curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Crosstalk-Solutions/project-nomad/refs/heads/main/install/install_nomad.sh \
  -o install_nomad.sh && \
sudo bash install_nomad.sh

Project N.O.M.A.D. is now installed on your device! Open a browser and navigate to http://localhost:8080 (or http://DEVICE_IP:8080) to start exploring!

For a complete step-by-step walkthrough (including Ubuntu installation), see the Installation Guide. For Windows users, see the WSL2 install guide — community-supported path covering native Docker and Docker Desktop install routes.

Advanced Installation

For more control over the installation process, copy and paste the Docker Compose template into a docker-compose.yml file and customize it to your liking (be sure to replace any placeholders with your actual values). Then, run docker compose up -d to start the Command Center and its dependencies. Note: this method is recommended for advanced users only, as it requires familiarity with Docker and manual configuration before starting.

How It Works

N.O.M.A.D. is a management UI ("Command Center") and API that orchestrates a collection of containerized tools and resources via Docker. It handles installation, configuration, and updates for everything — so you don't have to.

Built-in capabilities include:

  • AI Chat with Knowledge Base — local AI chat powered by Ollama or you can use OpenAI API compatible software such as LM Studio or llama.cpp, with document upload and semantic search (RAG via Qdrant)
  • Information Library — offline Wikipedia, medical references, ebooks, and more via Kiwix
  • Education Platform — Khan Academy courses with progress tracking via Kolibri
  • Offline Maps — downloadable regional maps via ProtoMaps
  • Data Tools — encryption, encoding, and analysis via CyberChef
  • Notes — local note-taking via FlatNotes
  • System Benchmark — hardware scoring with a community leaderboard
  • Supply Depot — a one-click app catalog (PDF tools, file browser, e-book library, password manager, and more) plus the ability to run your own custom Docker containers
  • Automatic Updates — opt-in, hands-off updates for the core software, installed apps, and offline content, on a schedule you control
  • Easy Setup Wizard — guided first-time configuration with curated content collections

N.O.M.A.D. also includes built-in tools like a Wikipedia content selector, ZIM library manager, and content explorer.

What's Included

Capability Powered By What You Get
Information Library Kiwix Offline Wikipedia, medical references, survival guides, ebooks
AI Assistant Ollama + Qdrant Built-in chat with document upload and semantic search
Education Platform Kolibri Khan Academy courses, progress tracking, multi-user support
Offline Maps ProtoMaps Downloadable regional maps for offline viewing and search
Data Tools CyberChef Encryption, encoding, hashing, and data analysis
Notes FlatNotes Local note-taking with markdown support
System Benchmark Built-in Hardware scoring, Builder Tags, and community leaderboard
Supply Depot Built-in One-click app catalog + bring-your-own custom Docker containers

Device Requirements

While many similar offline survival computers are designed to be run on bare-minimum, lightweight hardware, Project N.O.M.A.D. is quite the opposite. To install and run the available AI tools, we highly encourage the use of a beefy, GPU-backed device to make the most of your install.

At its core, however, N.O.M.A.D. is still very lightweight. For a barebones installation of the management application itself, the following minimal specs are required:

Note: Project N.O.M.A.D. is not sponsored by any hardware manufacturer and is designed to be as hardware-agnostic as possible. The hardware listed below is for example/comparison use only

Minimum Specs

  • Processor: 2 GHz dual-core processor or better
  • RAM: 4GB system memory
  • Storage: At least 5 GB free disk space
  • OS: Debian-based (Ubuntu recommended)
  • Stable internet connection (required during install only)

To run LLMs and other included AI tools:

Optimal Specs

  • Processor: AMD Ryzen 7 or Intel Core i7 or better
  • RAM: 32 GB system memory
  • Graphics: NVIDIA RTX 3060 or AMD equivalent or better (more VRAM = run larger models)
  • Storage: At least 250 GB free disk space (preferably on SSD)
  • OS: Debian-based (Ubuntu recommended)
  • Stable internet connection (required during install only)

For detailed build recommendations at three price points ($150–$1,000+), see the Hardware Guide.

Again, Project N.O.M.A.D. itself is quite lightweight — it's the tools and resources you choose to install with N.O.M.A.D. that will determine the specs required for your unique deployment

Running AI models on a different host

By default, N.O.M.A.D.'s installer will attempt to setup Ollama on the host when the AI Assistant is installed. However, if you would like to run the AI model on a different host, you can go to the settings of the AI assistant and input a URL for either an ollama or OpenAI-compatible API server (such as LM Studio).
Note that if you use Ollama on a different host, you must start the server with this option: OLLAMA_HOST=0.0.0.0.
Ollama is the preferred way to use the AI assistant, as it has features such as model download that OpenAI API does not support. So when using LM Studio, for example, you will have to use LM Studio to download models. You are responsible for the setup of Ollama/OpenAI server on the other host.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

For answers to common questions about Project N.O.M.A.D., please see our FAQ page.

About Internet Usage & Privacy

Project N.O.M.A.D. is designed for offline usage. An internet connection is only required during the initial installation (to download dependencies) and if you (the user) decide to download additional tools and resources at a later time. Otherwise, N.O.M.A.D. does not require an internet connection and has ZERO built-in telemetry.

To test internet connectivity, N.O.M.A.D. first attempts to make a request to Cloudflare's utility endpoint, https://1.1.1.1/cdn-cgi/trace. If that endpoint is unreachable (for example, because your network blocks 1.1.1.1), it falls back to other endpoints the application already contacts (the GitHub API and the Project N.O.M.A.D. API) and considers the connection online if any of them respond.

You can override the endpoint used for this check in two ways. The connectivity test URL can be configured from the UI under Settings → Advanced (stored locally on your instance), or you can set the INTERNET_STATUS_TEST_URL environment variable. When set, the environment variable always takes precedence over the UI-configured value. If neither is set, the built-in defaults above are used.

About Security

By design, Project N.O.M.A.D. is intended to be open and available without hurdles — it includes no authentication. If you decide to connect your device to a local network after install (e.g. for allowing other devices to access its resources), you can block/open ports to control which services are exposed.

Will authentication be added in the future? Maybe. It's not currently a priority, but if there's enough demand for it, we may consider building in an optional authentication layer in a future release to support use cases where multiple users need access to the same instance but with different permission levels (e.g. family use with parental controls, classroom use with teacher/admin accounts, etc.). We have a suggestion for this on our public roadmap, so if this is something you'd like to see, please upvote it here: https://roadmap.projectnomad.us/posts/1/user-authentication-please-build-in-user-auth-with-admin-user-roles

For now, we recommend using network-level controls to manage access if you're planning to expose your N.O.M.A.D. instance to other devices on a local network. N.O.M.A.D. is not designed to be exposed directly to the internet, and we strongly advise against doing so unless you really know what you're doing, have taken appropriate security measures, and understand the risks involved.

Contributing

Contributions are welcome and appreciated! Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for guidelines on how to contribute to the project.

Testing Auto-Updates (Dry Run)

The Command Center can automatically install minor/patch updates of itself during a configurable window, after a cool-off period, and only when pre-flight checks pass (sufficient disk for the new image, no downloads or app installs in progress). Major versions always require a manual update.

Because exercising this logic with real version bumps is impractical, an Ace command runs the entire decision pipeline without ever triggering an update. Run it from the admin/ directory:

# 1) Deterministic scenario suite — no network, DB, or Docker required.
#    Proves every branch (major-only, cool-off, prerelease/draft, window wrap, …)
#    and exits non-zero on failure, so it's safe to wire into CI.
node ace auto-update:dry-run --scenarios

# 2) Simulate "what would happen if I were running 1.32.0 right now?"
#    against the LIVE GitHub releases feed and real pre-flight checks:
node ace auto-update:dry-run --current=1.32.0 --force-enabled

# 3) Fully offline simulation with a canned release list and a fixed clock:
node ace auto-update:dry-run --current=1.32.0 --force-enabled \
  --releases-file=./fixtures/releases.json --now=2026-06-04T21:00:00Z \
  --window-start=20:00 --window-end=23:00 --cooloff=72 --skip-preflight

It prints the resolved decision — current version, whether the clock is inside the window, the eligible target (if any), and pre-flight blockers — ending in a clear verdict such as WOULD UPDATE → v1.33.2 or WOULD NOT UPDATE (outside-window): …. No real update is ever requested.

Flag Description
--scenarios Run the built-in deterministic scenario suite and exit
--current=<version> Simulate this currently-running version (e.g. 1.32.0)
--force-enabled Treat auto-update as enabled, ignoring the saved setting
--cooloff=<hours> Override the cool-off period
--window-start=<HH:MM> / --window-end=<HH:MM> Override the update window
--now=<ISO timestamp> Simulate the clock at a specific time
--releases-file=<path> Use a local JSON releases array instead of fetching GitHub (offline)
--skip-preflight Bypass the Docker/disk/queue pre-flight checks

Community & Resources

License

Project N.O.M.A.D. is licensed under the Apache License 2.0.

Helper Scripts

Once installed, Project N.O.M.A.D. has a few helper scripts should you ever need to troubleshoot issues or perform maintenance that can't be done through the Command Center. All of these scripts are found in Project N.O.M.A.D.'s install directory, /opt/project-nomad

Start Script - Starts all installed project containers

sudo bash /opt/project-nomad/start_nomad.sh

Stop Script - Stops all installed project containers

sudo bash /opt/project-nomad/stop_nomad.sh

Update Script - Attempts to pull the latest images for the Command Center and its dependencies (i.e. mysql) and recreate the containers. Note: this only updates the Command Center containers. It does not update the installable application containers - that should be done through the Command Center UI

sudo bash /opt/project-nomad/update_nomad.sh

Uninstall Script - Need to start fresh? Use the uninstall script to make your life easy. Note: this cannot be undone!

curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Crosstalk-Solutions/project-nomad/refs/heads/main/install/uninstall_nomad.sh -o uninstall_nomad.sh && sudo bash uninstall_nomad.sh