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Ask HN: What would you bring on a hard drive for Cubans who don't have internet?
15 points by slydo 3679 days ago
After reading this story https://web.archive.org/web/20150208082806/http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/C/CB_CUBA_SECRET_NETWORK?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT i'm left with the question: what would be the most valuable data to get into Cuba to help the local population. Books? Audio? Video? Software? what would you bring?
10 comments

Wikipedia Offline: http://xowa.org/

OpenStreetMap: http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Downloading_data

Project Gutenberg Offline: https://github.com/kiwix/gutenberg

Scihub (google "scihub torrents") (caution: 50TB corpus)

Gitlab (or packaged as a VM to run locally): https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce

Khan Academy: http://spectrum.ieee.org/geek-life/hands-on/how-to-run-khan-...

StackExchange: https://archive.org/details/stackexchange

Regarding openstreetmap, it might be a good idea in general but I suspect that OpenStreetmap details would be really poor in Cuba because of the lack of contributors. So I am not sure it would be that useful to Cubans (who still have restrictions to travel IIRC).

Just checked, I was wrong : it is actually not that bad: https://www.openstreetmap.org/relation/5252057#map=17/23.104...

Could this question get more Hacker News?

The service called El Packete is what you'd expect, and it carries every-day stuff: http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/infrastructure/a1...

If people want Stack Overflow they'll ask for it. They're not without internet access, it's just that their ping times are really, really high.

The free scientific comic books linked from this page. Just scroll down for English or Spanish versions. https://www.savoir-sans-frontieres.com/JPP/telechargeables/f...

And try to get ebooks and documents about biogas production, permaculture, survival skills, handicrafts, how various things work, free computer programming books, compiler construction (Jack Crenshaw's work, not SICP), sewing patterns, cake recipe books, cocktail books (tourism is about to increase). No political propaganda.

All 33 chapters of R Kelly's rap opera: "Trapped in the Closet".

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trapped_in_the_Closet

I'd bring gutenburg, wikipedia, OpenStreetMap, Scihub, KhanAcademy, etc. as already mentioned by others. I'd also bring DOOM. And if they had LAN, I'd bring Quake. Because no matter how grim a situation gets, a good game is fun.
If I had enough storage I'd give them a repository of all reasonably large free software projects. I'd also give them SciHub and everything in arXiv.
Wikipedia dump, textbooks on a wide variety of subjects, any practical information that can be useful considering the limited resources on the island.
This is desert island disks (as opposed to discs).
My kickass music library.