Why is Nomad different?
Nomad is built with Chromium and should feel exactly like any other Web browser. The big difference: Nomad can host websites.
Hosting a website is traditionally done by “servers” which are specialized computers in the cloud. Servers require a variety of skills to run, and while there are some great services out there to make it easier, we wanted to try something new. We figured, what if anybody could host a website from their laptop?
We call those self-hosted sites “Hyperdrives.”
- “Hyper” because they’re kind of magical, and
- “Drives” because they’re collections of files.
It’s not just a harddrive, it’s a Hyperdrive!
You can create a Hyperdrive from Nomad, add your website’s HTML, and then share the Hyperdrive link with any other Nomad user. Their computer will connect directly to yours, as if you were running a server up in the cloud.
What does Nomad do better than other browsers?
Nomad makes building a Website weirdly easy. We have a builtin editor, tools to sync folders with your website, and some pretty fun APIs for reading and writing the files in your website.
If you’re a teacher in a digital classroom, especially if you’re teaching web development, Nomad is really handy. Your students don’t need to learn Git, the commandline, or any other piece of server administration. They can download Nomad and get straight into the business of building Websites.
Dev teams may also find Nomad handy for working on site prototypes. All you have to do is load the prototype into Nomad and share the hyper:// link around the office. If somebody wants to make a change, they can fork the site and share their version back.
Nomad takes the drudge work out of hosting sites.
What does a “peer to peer” browser make possible?
The technology we chose to use in Nomad is called “peer to peer networking,” often shortened to “P2P.” P2P has been around for decades but has always been under-used. With Nomad, we’re finding new use-cases for P2P.
The main benefit of P2P is how easy it makes hosting. Basically any device can start hosting a P2P website at any time. That’s pretty nice!
Another benefit is how P2P enables private sharing. When you create a Hyperdrive and share the link, then only people with the link can view the site. If you’re working on things that you’d rather not share with the cloud — like your business’ intellectual property, or your family’s photo albums — then P2P is a great choice.
What is the whole “decentralized Web” thing about?
Basically the “decentralized Web” or “dweb” is about having a digital life that’s not entirely controlled by a corporation. Decentralizers want to live independently and they’re worried about what happens when Facebook or Google controls everything about the Internet.
It’s a somewhat activist vibe, but it’s our vibe. We think peer-to-peer networking should handle as much of our digital lives as it can, because peer-to-peer means there aren’t intermediaries running the network. We’ll always use a combination of centralized and peer-to-peer software, and that’s okay. It’s when centralized software is the only option that we start to worry.