Photo by Zac Durant on Unsplash

We’ve finally made it.

Metin Emenullahi
hernilabs
Published in
3 min readApr 1, 2019

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After months of comprehensive research and development, we accomplished what no one has never even attempted before.

Background

A few months ago, while building Herni’s data transportation infrastructure, we came across with perhaps one of most important, yet overlooked protocols in communication & data transportation history. RFC1149.

We started looking into it; trying to understand why nobody has never took initiative on this.

We found that Bergen Linux Users Group tried a simple ping test back in 2001. At first a massive collective data lost was observed on several packet carriers due to an unforeseen conjunction.

Later on, a packet carrier successfully transmitted the data to destination.

64 bytes from 10.0.3.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=255 time=6165731.1 ms

Despite the massive delay in ping, the experiment was declared a success. The group announced that they’re looking forward to some other implementations to do interoperability tests.

For almost 18 years no other implementations has surfaced.

Until today!

Introducing IPoAV support in Herni Ecosystem.

After RFC1149 first submitted at 1990, two other updates were submitted at 1999 and 2011. One was for QoS on IPoAV and the other was IPv6 support.

We took an initiative on creating the first fully-functional implementation of RFC1149 for commercial use.

We have built additional functionalities to the protocol, which will make it more reliable, more robust, with less delay and more secure.

We are the only company in the world(!) who even had the courage to attempt to build this data collection support. Why?

Because; IPoAV is a very tricky protocol. It takes a lot of reading, extensive comprehension about biology, physics, and technology. After understanding these, our team had to figure out a way to build a system to manage cellular structure of avian transportation.

Because of this know-how barrier and, frankly, the barrier of “having no guts”, no one, not even a single company in the world has ever attempted to build a support for this protocol. Being smart is not enough, you have to be bold to tackle bold problems.

How we did it?

We tried many different things, including trying to manage cellular structure of avian nodes using implanted chips. We encountered with many logistical obstacles.

Also we found out about many ethical arguments from several Avian Protection Organizations.

We also couldn’t find a doctor in black market, who would attempt a, let’s just say, “illegal” surgery.

The problem just got bigger with this solution.

So we dropped this idea and focused on finding a way to transport milligrams from point A to point B without any surgical procedure.

The solution

Finally we got our solution when a friend of mine were feeding avians in a park.

We decided to lay out breadcrumbs on streets and pathways to securely redirect avians to destination. And the destinations were designed to feed them treats for the “job well done”.

The destinations are avian houses, located at various points in the cities. We’ll fund building them in-house, working together with said organizations (Avian Protection Agencies).

Next Steps

We are now on the verge of implementing a mechanism to protect against denial-of-service attacks as per security considerations in RFC6214.

Also we are going to implement a Transport Layer, and Transport Layer Security. We are doing research on implementing RSA encryption on milligrams.

For this, we are open to suggestions and collaborations with research centers, universities and corporations.

What do we need?

We need people who would connect us to APAs and enable us to pitch our solution to them. It not only concerns them from a financial point of view, but also this solution potentially has many innovative societal and social positive impacts. Starting with: no more hungry avians on streets. All of them will get equal opportunity on survival, as long as they do what is expected of them.

Thank you!

Thank you for reading and please mark TODAY’s date; as it is very important for us to have accomplished something that has never even been tried before.

Cheers,

Metin

P.S: Call for Startups

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Metin Emenullahi
hernilabs

Co-Founder and CPO @ Agcurate, 🛰Space Tech 🌏Earth Observation 🏃‍♂️🚵‍♂️🧗‍♂️ Adrenaline Addict with passion for 🎼 Music Production.