Main Page Draft: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
// via Wikitext Extension for VSCode |
||
| Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
For an inside look at how 44Net came to be, see [https://archive.org/details/youtube-MQVyJUjmfZc The 44Net Origin Story], a series of conversations with people who were there. | For an inside look at how 44Net came to be, see [https://archive.org/details/youtube-MQVyJUjmfZc The 44Net Origin Story], a series of conversations with people who were there. | ||
== Start Here == | == Start Here == | ||
| Line 24: | Line 25: | ||
* '''Getting involved''': [[Policies|Policies]], [[Governance|Governance]], and [[Contributing|Contributing]] | * '''Getting involved''': [[Policies|Policies]], [[Governance|Governance]], and [[Contributing|Contributing]] | ||
== What People Build on 44Net == | == What People Build on 44Net == | ||
| Line 40: | Line 42: | ||
For more detailed examples and case studies, see [[What People Build|What People Build on 44Net]]. | For more detailed examples and case studies, see [[What People Build|What People Build on 44Net]]. | ||
== Stewardship and Participation == | == Stewardship and Participation == | ||
| Line 50: | Line 53: | ||
Participation in 44Net takes many forms: running services, maintaining documentation, mentoring new users, contributing technical expertise, and helping coordinate shared projects. All of these forms of work are valued and necessary to the health of the network. | Participation in 44Net takes many forms: running services, maintaining documentation, mentoring new users, contributing technical expertise, and helping coordinate shared projects. All of these forms of work are valued and necessary to the health of the network. | ||
== Documentation Status == | == Documentation Status == | ||
| Line 56: | Line 60: | ||
Foundational guides, portal documentation, and operational references are being developed in stages. For now, this page serves as a pointer to current, maintained resources. | Foundational guides, portal documentation, and operational references are being developed in stages. For now, this page serves as a pointer to current, maintained resources. | ||
== Next Steps == | == Next Steps == | ||
Revision as of 17:53, 5 February 2026
44Net gives licensed amateur radio operators access to public, globally routable IP addresses, so they can build and operate real systems on the open Internet.

44Net exists so individuals and groups can learn, experiment, and run services using directly reachable addresses, free of the constraints of NAT or consumer-grade Internet service.
On 44Net, participants work directly with the connective tissue of the Internet as builders, not just users.
The network traces its roots to 1981, when Hank Magnuski asked Jon Postel for IP address space to support amateur packet radio networking, at a time when the Internet was still taking shape in text files on university minicomputers. As the Internet has evolved, 44Net has grown through decades of technical and community stewardship into a worldwide federation of community networks.
Today, 44Net continues to be built and operated by its participants, with the support of Amateur Radio Digital Communicatons (ARDC).
For an inside look at how 44Net came to be, see The 44Net Origin Story, a series of conversations with people who were there.
Start Here
If you are new, returning, or already building, start here:
- New to 44Net: Getting started
- Already signed up: DNS and naming, Routing and connectivity, and Portal sign-in
- Getting involved: Policies, Governance, and Contributing
What People Build on 44Net
Participants use 44Net address space for a wide range of independent and community projects, including:
- Personal and home infrastructure
Remote access to home stations, self-hosted services, and project sites
- Shared radio and emergency systems
Networked repeaters, gateways, and public-service communications
- Community networks
Club, maker space, and local group infrastructure
- RF and point-to-point links
VHF, UHF, and microwave links across regions and between sites
- Overlay and experimental networks
VPNs, tunnels, mesh systems, and testbeds
For more detailed examples and case studies, see What People Build on 44Net.
Stewardship and Participation
44Net is sustained through a combination of volunteer effort, shared norms, and institutional support. Most of the network’s day-to-day work — from maintaining infrastructure to helping new participants — is carried out by members of the community.
ARDC provides governance, legal and fiduciary oversight, and staff support. Within that framework, participants are responsible for building, operating, and caring for their own systems, and for working cooperatively with others who share the network.
Policies and guidelines are developed and maintained in the open, drawing on community experience and evolving operational practice. While many reflect long-standing norms, others are still being refined as the network grows and new use cases emerge. ARDC provides continuity and institutional oversight, helping ensure that this process remains fair, consistent, and aligned with the network’s long-term stewardship.
Participation in 44Net takes many forms: running services, maintaining documentation, mentoring new users, contributing technical expertise, and helping coordinate shared projects. All of these forms of work are valued and necessary to the health of the network.
Documentation Status
This wiki is under active reconstruction as part of an ongoing effort to improve clarity, organization, and coverage. Some pages are incomplete, outdated, or in transition as this work progresses.
Foundational guides, portal documentation, and operational references are being developed in stages. For now, this page serves as a pointer to current, maintained resources.
Next Steps
If this page has helped you orient yourself, these are good ways to continue:
- Getting connected and claiming address space: Getting started and Portal sign-in
- Building and operating your network: DNS and naming and Routing and connectivity
- Exploring current documentation and resources: Wiki index
- Contributing knowledge, tools, or support: How to get involved