Designer & developer. Helping improve bitcoin design with many others at https://bitcoin.design . I write a weekly update at https://gbks.substack.com . ✌️
Here's a visual for a planned transaction visualizer in the Bitcoin Core App (Sparrow-inspired). Does that look useful to you? You can also try the work-in-progress web prototype:
Sometimes the problems with adults is that they have the ability to plausibly-enough rationalize anything and everything, and trick themselves into believing weird stuff as some deep and newly-discovered truth. Good to be humble with opinions.
Is this a good way to have users enter lightning offers? For example, in a Nostr client when editing your profile. Trying to use technical terms to the least amount possible.
I threw identicons in there just for fun. Would be nice to have visual hashes for a quick gut check, but that would obviously relay on broadly standardized implementation.
To request bitcoin, you can share a
- (Legacy/Script/SegWit/Taproot) address
- Reusable payment code
- Silent payments address
- Lightning invoice
- Lightning offer
- Lightning address
- Human-readable address
As text, BIP21 URI or QR Code. Or ask for a Fedimint/Cashu token.
Probs overlooking some other options (including bad ones like sharing xpubs) and details, but either way this is a lot to wrangle in UX and for users to have a general framework for. Let's see what solutions we converge on.
A byproduct of @Saving Satoshi is this bitcoin script editor. The team built it for chapter 9, where you learn how to construct different spending mechanisms, and now it's available as a separate tool. It's brand new, we'd love to hear your thoughts.
This is a great episode to listen to for learning about the dynamics of how work sometimes gets done in open-source. Very relevant for designers and other contributors as well.
The Open Design Guide reading calls have been really interesting, in that we have been diving in the human experience of designers & open-source. I hope the guide will be able to capture all these nuances and make it 10x easier for newcomers. Lots of work to do still.
We're having our 100th design call for the Bitcoin Core App (https://bitcoincore.app) project today. First one was almost exactly 3 years ago. Slow, steady, and deliberate (OK, it's a little messy sometimes).
Lots of conversations the past weeks around education efforts for helping more designers find their ways into the open-source bitcoin ecosystem and do good work. Great to see, lots to do to make it a reality.