Curious, which part is reinventing the wheel? If you're referring to the /bin/login hack, imagine instead, it's BBS software. (I had a lot of fun accessing my home computer from across town with a Psion 5mx and a Kenwood TH-D7! No practical value, just a good challenge.) As for the APRS-IS bridge, that would be quite useful for bridging relevant APRS-IS traffic within a given radius to LoRA, and vice-versa.
Also, I'm quite aware of IP over AX.25: I generally prefer to avoid that extra overhead for my intended applications. The stack I wrote exposes a BSD sockets-like interface to make it easy to make lots of software able to participate in the AX.25 fun, and even compiles on PowerPC Macintoshes for what it's worth.
Curious, which part is reinventing the wheel? If you're referring to the /bin/login hack, imagine instead, it's BBS software. (I had a lot of fun accessing my home computer from across town with a Psion 5mx and a Kenwood TH-D7! No practical value, just a good challenge.) As for the APRS-IS bridge, that would be quite useful for bridging relevant APRS-IS traffic within a given radius to LoRA, and vice-versa.
Also, I'm quite aware of IP over AX.25: I generally prefer to avoid that extra overhead for my intended applications. The stack I wrote exposes a BSD sockets-like interface to make it easy to make lots of software able to participate in the AX.25 fun, and even compiles on PowerPC Macintoshes for what it's worth.