Oh shoot. I forgot. This whole nostr movement might be a good opportunity to fix one of the main issues with all social media - how they force unidimensionality on everyone.
Basically, me (and all of us) are multidimensional human beings. I'm not *just* a developer or Bitcoin maxi, etc. There is more to me than that, that I'd like to share. But most people will not be interested in other aspects of me. They might want to see only technical posts etc. And then stop following me, as I produce posts they don't care about.
This forces everyone that wants to have any reach to be... just a one-topic pony. You only post about one area. Sure you could have multiple IDs, but that's not very practical.
I wish that users could have "personas" and select persona to post to when posting stuff, and then be able to follow only subset of personas of people they want to follow. Sure, I love your technical posts, but don't want to see your stupid political opinions (and vice versa, I guess), or I don't care about your hiking trips, or taste in cars, etc. If you could post your technical content under "dev" persona, I could follow that and I wouldn't have to unfollow you altogether.
dpc
dpcpw@iris.to
npub1yarp...0gd0
https://github.com/dpc
I'm so angry when I'm debugging code. It's like I'm boxing with a code or something. Trading blow for blows. And I'm bleeding but won't give up until the DAMN THING STARTS WORKING LIKE IT SHOULD!!!
Time flies.


tmux replacement in Rust
Soon there's not going to be any C-based tooling left to use.

Zellij
A terminal workspace with batteries included
#[0] , any plans for some ability to hide replies, etc.
It really quickly got very noisy on nostr, and scrolling through my `Following` is looking through mostly emojis, short replies that are irrelevant to me and I'm out of context on, etc.
One thing that we could do with Ordinals bloat, is to just to hardcode their list in the source code and not store them at all (possibly in some light-prunning mode).
This is not a HF, not even a SF. It's a simple optimization, not unlike pruning. And segwit witness discount was justified by the ability of (some) nodes to discard witness data. Purely an internal and later on p2p protocol change and an optimization. They are just an easy to identify bloat that could be very easily skipped for a speedup and less resource use. Older clients (or "full archival" node) could still store them, but most of the network don't need them for anything.
That should also put some breaks on the ordinal users who think they are really storing something in there.
I really need to find some better nostr client. What's currently recommended for each: web, NixOs & Android?