Offline computing: Internet in a box

A little follow up on my previous post about cached HTTP browsing.

Finding a way to access pages that may be of interest to us offline is
one thing.  But in a context where you do not have access to a fixed
connection, or even if it is really very limited, it is interesting to
have wide archives that can be consulted at will.  Perhaps the best
example is Wikipedia.

There is a well-known way to access Wikipedia without being connected
to the Internet, thanks to Kiwix.  Their website offers a wide choice
of content available as OpenZim files at https://library.kiwix.org/
including of course what comes from the Wikimedia Foundation (e.g.
https://wiki.kiwix.org/wiki/Content_in_all_languages).

And if, like me, you prefer to use command line than graphical user
interface, solene@ thought of us by concocting a little python script
that allows you to browse zim archives without leaving your terminal:
gopher://dataswamp.org/1/%7esolene/article-wikimedia-dump.

But one of my favorite project is certainly Internet in a Box (IIAB). 
It is the successor of XSCE (School Server Community Edition) from One
Laptop per Child.  Their idea is broader than offering content
accessible offline.  Indeed they help to set up networks independent of
the Internet in order to provide access to various content (school
teaching, reference material for medical professionals, etc.).

You can find a good description of their work on their website
https://internet-in-a-box.org/.  As well as examples of what can be
implemented at http://iiab.me/home/ (ebook shelves, applications to
learn various things, multimedia, etc.).  The installation of all this
is facilitated in particular by the use of different scripts and
applications (https://download.iiab.io/) but it is not very complicated
to install the block which one wishes on its own machine, independently
of the IIAB microcosm.

The primary motivation of this project is of course to bring different
content to communities which, due to their geographical remoteness,
have little or no access to the Internet.  I can't explain why but it's
something that touches me a lot.  And I mean a lot.

I believe this would be a dream job for me.  Go into contact with
remote communities, get to know them, share their life a bit, and help
them set up simple solutions to provide access to information they
need/want.  At a school level of course, or to health professionals
obviously, but also more widely.  That is to say, making sure to
provide access to cultural content, such as music, films, youtube
channels, novels, etc.  But also set up asynchronous communication
relays to share emails, videos, voice and text messages, boards and
forum messages.  All organized around a sneakernet network between
different communities and villages.

I would be very happy to use my good will as well as my few knowledge
and skills to contribute to this kind of thing in remote areas of some
places that I went, and that I loved; like in some remote corner of the
states of Oaxaca or Guerrero in Mexico where it can be even hard to
catch a GSM signal.

I would really feel like I am doing something good and meaningfull with
my life.  To do something that brings substantial help, but also
contact and human warmth.  And maybe a bit of joy and happiness too.