It has the potential to replace cell networks and give people sovereignty and privacy over their communications.
It can be used in emergency situations when power goes out or cellular traffic becomes saturated (concerts, sports events or other events), or when there simply is no cell service (I think the original intent of LoRa is long range monitoring of various sensor data).
It can be used to transmit location data that is visible for miles and miles around from a drone or plane, in case of emergency.
So - if I get something like a Station G2 and place it somewhere in my home - I can then get some Dragino sensors and add them to my network, even long distance? That's the idea, right?
We have a cabin off-grid - no power for most of the year - and I'd be interested in adding some sensors down there.
But range depends on a lot of factors. In my context it's open fields and forests. The path from your cabin to your home, I expect to be more challenging.
It will be challenging, for sure - it's in the woods, after all, and it's 150 km away. But that's exactly what LoRa is developed for, right? And if more people go online the problem of distance will disappear...
I mean, for the purposes of basic "text messaging", yes. And probably could support a lot of the features that many modern messengers have, except the ones that have large file sizes.