I started a thread about the first ham radio transaction using the Lightning netwoork, and how that could help us to make Bitcoin transfers without access to the Internet. The recent loss of Internet access in much of Venezuela has brought this topic to the fore again, and it seems there are other solutions. One of which is txTenna -
https://github.com/MuleTools/txTennaI rhink that this is something that we should be discussing in Bitcoin Talk, and I would be interested in being a part of any project that may be started here.
Very interesting. Though the feasibility of this on a large scale is yet to be seen.
Also, given the fact that the internet is already be widely available, and the reliability of it will only increase even in remote regions, I doubt the need for offline bitcoin transactions will be that significant in the future. Especially when you consider the priorities that people will have without any electricity, it's basically a very unlikely SHTF scenario.
But certainly it can happen, like in Venezuela. If a feasible, large scale way of doing this on-chain can be found, then it'll certainly add to the functionality of the network.
Is this really a thing? It seems that we are learning backwards here.
We are not. We're simply trying to adapt bitcoin to as many possible scenarios as possible, so that its properties as a currency can be cemented and that its dependence on the internet, which may not be fully decentralised, can be reduced. That's furthering bitcoin's use, not going backwards.