Brainstorming distributed publishing
by Turbocapitalist from LinuxQuestions.org on (#5REDR)
I am looking explore options for distributed publishing. What software is there?
The material to be published is a mixture of text (lots of it), supplemented with images, audio, and video. In other words, it is basic web page material, but heavily text-oriented and numbering many tens of thousands of documents. I have no qualms about leaving HTTP/HTTPS behind if necessary or would Rsync web site mirrors be the best bet? In that case would it help if the documents were static, generated by a static site generator, or dynamic and stored in WordPress? NNTP and IPFS are out for different reasons, IPFS in particular because of its heavy CPU and bandwidth requirements. Gemini looks promising but is not finalized and currently has issues with large files, such as video. How is the redundancy in Ceph and can it tolerate nodes appearing and disappearing?
What else is there? Or, what else could be stitched together?
The material to be published is a mixture of text (lots of it), supplemented with images, audio, and video. In other words, it is basic web page material, but heavily text-oriented and numbering many tens of thousands of documents. I have no qualms about leaving HTTP/HTTPS behind if necessary or would Rsync web site mirrors be the best bet? In that case would it help if the documents were static, generated by a static site generator, or dynamic and stored in WordPress? NNTP and IPFS are out for different reasons, IPFS in particular because of its heavy CPU and bandwidth requirements. Gemini looks promising but is not finalized and currently has issues with large files, such as video. How is the redundancy in Ceph and can it tolerate nodes appearing and disappearing?
What else is there? Or, what else could be stitched together?