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I just realized I haven't seen this phrase used to encourage me to reply to a post in a while. Has it been retired as a result of the bull market? It is no longer accurate.
Isn't it, though (if you're not anon)? 1 sat is still less than a penny?
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Ah yes. I jumped the gun a bit. I was thinking along the lines of posting, not replying.
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I think 1 sat is just about 1 penny now, no?
Edit: Oh wait, it's about 0.1 pennies
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seems no longer appropriate. but it's still possible to show up. the phrases now:
const placeholder = useMemo(() => { return [ 'comment for currency?', 'fractions of a penny for your thoughts?', 'put your money where your mouth is?' ][parentId % 3] }, [parentId])
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Yep. I know now. For some reason it just hasn't been popping up much for me.
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43 sats \ 2 replies \ @ek 22 Nov
It's deterministic and independent of who views an item. Everyone sees the same text. The id of the item must have the remainder of 1 when divided by three for "fractions of a penny for your thoughts?" to show up. Example: #737683
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Wow. Interesting.
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I see
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53 sats \ 0 replies \ @Golu 23 Nov
This phrase is amazing. I remember someone in my college used to say it a lot. The Hindi of this phrase is "dimag kaha he," which translates to "where's your mind?," but the literal meaning is this phrase. This is where language learning becomes difficult I guess. Thanks.
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Why even reference the penny. Whats a new way to say it with sats?
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Generational wealth
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43 sats \ 1 reply \ @Bit_Alb 22 Nov
The phrase has been slightly altered: Now it is "a penny for your thoughts".
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @ek 22 Nov
No it hasn't 👀
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a pennys? :)
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