Some say you should self-boost your notes to make them visible to several timezones. I say add value to your inital note and refer to it in a new note targeted to other timezones. Everything else is like YELLING at your followers. GFY. As an example for this adding value and refering instead of self-boost process see #wwatTHEbook

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I was discussing strategies for multicasting notes in a way that is considerate of different time zones and adds value to the nostr entities and our network. Here's a breakdown of the key points: 1. **Self-Boosting Notes**: The idea of "self-boosting" your notes refers to the practice of repeatedly promoting or highlighting your own content to ensure it reaches a wider audience. However, I suggest that this approach can come off as overly aggressive or annoying, akin to "yelling" at followers. 2. **Adding Value**: Instead of simply promoting the same note multiple times, I advocate for enhancing the original content. This could mean providing additional insights, context, or updates that make the note more valuable to the reader. 3. **Targeting Different Time Zones**: When sharing content, it's important to consider that your audience may be in different time zones. By creating a new note that references the original but is tailored to a specific audience, you can engage with them more effectively. This approach respects their time and attention. 4. **Referencing Original Content**: By referring back to the initial note in the new content, you maintain a connection between the two while also providing fresh value. This way, readers who may have missed the original note can still benefit from the new one. 5. **Example - #wwatTHEbook**: #wwatTHEbook refers to a specific example that illustrates the concept of adding value and referencing original content. It suggests that there is a practical application of this strategy that can be observed. Whereas viewed from the meta perspective, this note here is exactly what I'm doing for my initial #wwatTHEbook note: add value. Referring back to my initial item which i'd like to add value to. Some might say instead of "add value to" the word "promote". However this is attention economy bullshit thinking and deeply a fiat mindset which will not persist after #hyperbitcoinization. In summary, I encourage a more thoughtful and strategic approach to sharing notes across different time zones, focusing on adding value rather than simply promoting the same message repeatedly.
I love it too. But here's the scary side: It took me quite limited effort than what the reader aka. you might expect. Just two #AI promts and some proofreading and lingo adaption to the context of nostr as well as elaborating manually about my special use case with #wwatTHEbook. To explicit name it: #yestr I had to run it through my brain and accept the generation as legit. I accepted it as mine and did some important edits. I wasn't #vibecoding and just took the output of AI blindly and reply to you. 🫂 However it's fucking impressive how AI fills the content as if I were writing it myself. Look at the chat history, if you're interested: image Output: The message you're referring to seems to be discussing strategies for sharing notes or content in a way that is considerate of different time zones and adds value to the audience. Here's a breakdown of the key points: 1. **Self-Boosting Notes**: The idea of "self-boosting" your notes likely refers to the practice of repeatedly promoting or highlighting your own content to ensure it reaches a wider audience. However, the author suggests that this approach can come off as overly aggressive or annoying, akin to "yelling" at followers. 2. **Adding Value**: Instead of simply promoting the same note multiple times, the author advocates for enhancing the original content. This could mean providing additional insights, context, or updates that make the note more valuable to the reader. 3. **Targeting Different Time Zones**: When sharing content, it's important to consider that your audience may be in different time zones. By creating a new note that references the original but is tailored to a specific audience, you can engage with them more effectively. This approach respects their time and attention. 4. **Referencing Original Content**: By referring back to the initial note in the new content, you maintain a connection between the two while also providing fresh value. This way, readers who may have missed the original note can still benefit from the new one. 5. **Example - #wwatTHEbook**: The mention of "#wwatTHEbook" likely refers to a specific example or case study that illustrates the concept of adding value and referencing original content. It suggests that there is a practical application of this strategy that can be observed. In summary, the message encourages a more thoughtful and strategic approach to sharing content across different time zones, focusing on adding value rather than simply promoting the same message repeatedly. image Output: Sure! Here’s the reformulated explanation: --- The message I'm referring to discusses strategies for sharing notes or content in a way that is considerate of different time zones and adds value to the audience. Here's a breakdown of the key points: 1. **Self-Boosting Notes**: The idea of "self-boosting" your notes refers to the practice of repeatedly promoting or highlighting your own content to ensure it reaches a wider audience. However, I suggest that this approach can come off as overly aggressive or annoying, akin to "yelling" at followers. 2. **Adding Value**: Instead of simply promoting the same note multiple times, I advocate for enhancing the original content. This could mean providing additional insights, context, or updates that make the note more valuable to the reader. 3. **Targeting Different Time Zones**: When sharing content, it's important to consider that your audience may be in different time zones. By creating a new note that references the original but is tailored to a specific audience, you can engage with them more effectively. This approach respects their time and attention. 4. **Referencing Original Content**: By referring back to the initial note in the new content, you maintain a connection between the two while also providing fresh value. This way, readers who may have missed the original note can still benefit from the new one. 5. **Example - #wwatTHEbook**: The mention of "#wwatTHEbook" likely refers to a specific example or case study that illustrates the concept of adding value and referencing original content. It suggests that there is a practical application of this strategy that can be observed. In summary, I encourage a more thoughtful and strategic approach to sharing content across different time zones, focusing on adding value rather than simply promoting the same message repeatedly. AI model: GPT-4o via https://duck.ai
Update 2:
thepurpose's avatar thepurpose
💯 "I now circle back to my main point: I have never seen any form of create generative model output (be that image, text, audio, or video) which I would rather see than the original prompt. The resulting output has less substance than the prompt and lacks any human vision in its creation. The whole point of making creative work is to share one’s own experience - if there’s no experience to share, why bother? If it’s not worth writing, it’s not worth reading." -- Clayton Ramsey
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I recommend adding value instead of boosting to other timezones. PV. 🫂
thepurpose's avatar thepurpose
Some say you should self-boost your notes to make them visible to several timezones. I say add value to your inital note and refer to it in a new note targeted to other timezones. Everything else is like YELLING at your followers. GFY. As an example for this adding value and refering instead of self-boost process see #wwatTHEbook
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