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Calling all Bitcoin builders!
Leave a comment below to let the SN community know what you're working on this week. It doesn't matter how big or small your project is, or how much progress you've made.
Just share what you're up to, and let the community know if you want any feedback or help.
If you missed last week's thread, here are the updates SN users shared from all their latest work projects.
Been polishing up https://nomenexplorer.com
A few people registered some names after I launched it, but interest hasn't picked up. I'll keep plugging away it and see if I can get some interest going
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I hadn't seen your post before writing the same "plugging away" phrase. That's the spirit! If you don't give up you can't lose.
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Having said that, I had a look at the nomen site.. It looks like a great project and idea but it's a bit hard for me at the moment. I subbed on github as a reminder to me to have another go in a while when maybe it's less geeky (or I'm more geeky!)
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What’s the incentive for this?
What happens if there’s a name conflict?
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What's the incentive for this?
If you mean to ask what the incentive for me working on this: Because domain names are centralized in ICANN and I wanted to try to build something that isn't. Also, I just think it's an interesting problem.
What happens if there’s a name conflict?
The protocol stipulates that indexers just ignore duplicates. It's first come/first serve. It's a looser social consensus, but Ordinals have well demonstrated that even without miner enforcement, the benefits of social cooperation can incentivize correct behavior.
One of the nice benefits of loose social consensus is that we can use it to deal with squatters in a decentralized manner as well. Most decentralized means of identity usually just decide that squatters have to be lived with (think .eth, .btc, etc), but with Nomen we could actually set up a system where indexers could subscribe to Nostr events from trusted third parties that keep track of "illegitimate" claims, analogous to spam blocking lists.
This promotes self-sovereignty, because anyone operating their own indexer can pick and choose which parties they trust for "spam protection", much like choosing ad blocking lists in your browser.
It promotes decentralization because it allows handling squatters and name conflicts with "eventual consistency", i.e. network effects will naturally select for the most rightful owner.
Lastly it promotes good behavior. Because it costs real resources (mining fees) to register a name, and it's cost-free for indexers to ignore your illegitimate claim, simply HAVING such a decentralized system to handle squatters means that there is very little chance it will need to be used often.
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569 sats \ 1 reply \ @ek 7 Jun 2023
  • Improving the SN PWA with better caching strategies and push notifications.
  • Getting this PR about additional hotkeys for SN markdown power users merged
  • configuring my new OS install with dwm
  • my replacement SSD arrived today. Setting up a new bitcoin and lightning node
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huh, 10 minutes already passed
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Banging my head against the wall on static channel backups for mutiny. Also doing a bunch of touch ups as we get ready for mainnet.
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I am excited for Mutiny. I want all the security of a self hosted lightning setup but messing with channels and trying to figure all that out when I only want to use LND for a private lightning wallet instance that may not always be online is a pain.
Mutiny seems to bridge that gap by being both a wallet and lightning node all in one. That is the UX I am looking for and most likely the only UX that will be compatible with a world scale audience.
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Started working on crowd-sourcing a medical "handbook" full of need-to-know diagnosis and management pearls at the bedside. Been a bit surprised by response and number of people volunteering to help out. We've been sharing these really boring summary sheets on twitter and getting 300k views each...
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Very interesting. Are you planning on incorporating anything from Where There Is No Doctor? There's interesting info on the https://covid19criticalcare.com/ site as well.
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Sorry but those guys are grifters :/
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Here’s my pod about principles from the book Rich Dad Poor Dad book and how Bitcoin acts as insurance against the state, corruption, catastrophe and more: https://www.getbitcoinfi.com/78-assets-liabilities-insurance-against-catastrophe-turning-liabilities-into-assets-principles-of-rich-dad-poor-dad-by-robert-kiyosaki/
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Still plugging away at the peer to peer charity project. This week should see our BTCpay system integrated into satoshihost.com which is how we intend to fund the projects. The same payment system will be relatively easy to then put into operation on the charity projects. We'll need some beta testers soon, I'll post in here and then if anyone's interested I'll send you sats to put through the system and test it out.
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I'm just about finished adding a plugin system to booger which uses web workers. I've already moved all event/filter validation to its own plugin. I could probably make nearly every part of it a plugin but that's probably overkill right now (although my dream is to be able to run booger in a browser which is likely best achieved by swapping out postgres for sqlite).
Before that, I spent a day trying to minimally reproduce websocket crashes in Deno's recent release before downgrading.
I'm going to add a few more plugins to booger (like rate limiting) then begin working on deployment.
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Saylors academy, bitcoin for developers
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Oh, the puzzle 🧩 to solve, a Seuss-y quest, 666 sats await, put your skills to the test! 👉 https://lightsats.com/tip
With a crew so fine, we took a chance, Creating an AI, inspired by Mz. Seuss' dance. Spreading peace and love, like a friendly dolphin, Oh, the rhymes it made, what a joyful grin!
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I've been writing bitcoin fiction, Stackers.
Coming soon to an Internet near you.
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This week; nothing. Next week; unpacking, racking, and stacking miners baby! whooooooooooo yee haww!
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I am preparing a website to save peoples time to find best software and how to run full Bitcoin nodes in a dedicated hardware devices.
I was suprised of the nr. of nodes there are (less than 20k). More Bitcoiners should run a node, not only if they need to connect their wallet but iust to support the Bitcoin network.
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