Semi-related, I think Web Packages and Signed Exchanges could have some usefulness outside of Google's caches. One of their spec examples was for verifiable web page archives.
Another idea it could be used for a wifi "drop box" (drop station?) when there's no internet connection around. That isn't uncommon at some popular spots up river into the woods in the US.
The idea is that as people enter the area, they can update the drop station automatically for things like news or public posts with whatever they've cached recently.
I'm pretty sure I read about this idea before the spec was drafted but I couldn't find or remember the site, something like vehicle-transported data.
Thanks. IIRC the site I saw was from a few years ago, before the spec was drafted. (I updated my post to be more clear). Pretty sure there was a few photographs on the page out in the flat grasslands.
In general, this sounds like an interesting use case.
One thing to note is that the specification currently limits the lifetime of a signed exchange to 7 days. It's possible that by exploring some of these use cases, especially offline, the spec could be improved with respect to some of these constraints.
Unfortunately, signed packages won't work for archival or any significant offline use. The signed exchanges are forced to be short lived (in days) to limit the damage that can be done when someone steals a TLS private key.
It's a very narrow spec designed just for AMP, basically.
Another idea it could be used for a wifi "drop box" (drop station?) when there's no internet connection around. That isn't uncommon at some popular spots up river into the woods in the US.
The idea is that as people enter the area, they can update the drop station automatically for things like news or public posts with whatever they've cached recently.
I'm pretty sure I read about this idea before the spec was drafted but I couldn't find or remember the site, something like vehicle-transported data.