Replying to Avatar HoloKat

Having collected some feedback, combined with some personal ideas, here are what seem to be the areas for most improvement in Nostr / clients:

Discovery is an issue, people don’t know who to follow. Since the are not that many diverse profiles that are easy to discover, it might be easier to recommend topics (hashtags).

We could also add profile descriptions on other clients (I think Damus already has this).

Spammy global is a turn off.

Could be solved by recommending Hash tags to follow. What if we create a list of common hash tags (kind of like subreddits) and show those to people? To help populate them, we could (if technically possible) create a client-side list that can be autosuggested as you type in a hashtag. For example, if I typed #p - it could suggest Photography, Plants, Parenting, Philosophy, Programming, etc… This way people who are using hashtags to tag would have an easier time picking something that already exists instead of making totally random ones that nobody is going to discover unless they see it in a note.

Grownostr (IMO) is not a useful hashtag as it is too generic and mixes too many subjects into one. If it were up to me, I’d ditch this one and use auto-recommended ones if/when implemente.d

Crypto talk is a turn off. Can’t stop people from talking about what they are passionate about, so I think the best strategy is to find topics to follow.

Global could become a list of topics you follow instead of actual global notes. Once you follow a few topics, it would become much more useful.

Some (nobody?) understands NIP5 without reading into it. Personally I think this is a terrible name to begin with. Either rename it, or get rid of verification entirely. Since impersonation is likely to affect a smaller number of accounts, we could add paid verification for people who only exceed a certain number of followers. Not sure how you’d enforce this across clients though.. ideas welcome.

People are very confused about keys. nsec, npub, what to enter into a website, what not to… totally understandable. I propose we add small explainers and use old terminology within labels to help people understand these concepts. For example, an input field could be Username (npub) Password (nsec). Of course, I can already hear people shouting at me “But this is not what they are!” Rightfully so. Perhaps, then have tiny explainers, visual, video or just text to plainly explain the concepts right within signup.

Relays - hard to understand. No onboarding process talks about relays now. Idea I have here is to automatically connect people to top X relays while showing this screen in onboarding AND giving a quick explanation of what’s a really. Use fun, engaging copywriting combined with an image or a video to increase the odds of people reading / watching it.

People have a very hard time in profile setup. I think Damus is leading the way on this. Personally, I would stop immediately all development of other features and focus 100% on profile UX. This is a critical step IMO and needs to be absolutely nailed. We can’t expect people to use 3rd party image services to add a profile picture. It needs to be as easy as every other social platform.

People don’t know what zaps are, or how to find a wallet. Steep learning curve. Ideas here: Add old school terminology along side in labels. For example: Zaps (payments). 

For wallets, create a section within the client that explains wallets and recommends a few options (are there a few options, perhaps WoW, Alby).

Overall people are not familiar with many of the concepts of Nostr. Solution here would be to create an educational area in a client that covers terminology / concepts and has fun ways to explain what things are. Perhaps even a game or an interactive quiz. I know… a lot of work! 

One idea floated was having no signup process at all and generating a key on Post. I am not sure if this would be a good UX given people might get confused why there’s no way to signup or may not take their key seriously and misplace / ignore it. But, it would be cool to test this idea with some client.

As a science writer in my day job, I spend a lot of time explaining technical things to non-technical people. I have a TON to learn (like, almost everything) when it comes to how nostr actually works, but I would happily be involved in contributing to a lay-language help section!

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^ I don’t have this degree of acumen but have a few years of support material writing behind me and would be happy to help as well.

LFG 🔥

Volunteer for challenge, receive challenge.

First challenge: explain NIP-05 in human speak #[3]​ #[4]​ like you would to your grandma 😅

NIP-05 is a mechanic on Nostr that allows you take your npub (a long string of numbers and letters that is exclusive to you) and for most use cases, replace it with a third party generated identifier that looks similar to an email address, say: hound@bestdog.com. There are many different sites that help you do this and some even provide additional help if you need it.

While the npub is still used in the background to always identify you as you, the NIP-05 allows you to be searched and/or tagged by this identifier. Having it in place is not necessary but makes it a much simpler process for connecting with others.

Rough stab at it. I read the NIP and believe I captured it’s ideals without making it a “verification” or “prove you’re human” process.

Thanks for the challenge 😃

If you need anything else or want a rewrite, lemme know.

Ok now constrain your real estate to 35 words or less - this is a tooltip/similar on a small screen in your nostr client app.

The user will not have a positive experience if they have to read a full screen or more, or if they have to leave the app.

Aha. On it.

NIP-05 enables your npub (complex identifier exclusive to you) to be replaced with a identifier that looks similar to an email address.

Npubs are used in the background, NIP-05 is your easily shared identity.

third party Nostr identifier sounds like a great name instead of NIP5

Is this terminology understandable by the average twtr or fb user?

I’d think my abbreviated version is;

“NIP-05 enables your npub (complex identifier exclusive to you) to be replaced with a identifier that looks similar to an email address.

Npubs are used in the background, NIP-05 is your easily shared identity.”

I do like the preciseness of it being a third party that (usually) provides it but that could be off putting in the immediate first steps of an onboarding exp.

Probably not.

Challenge accepted! First step: Learn what NIP-05 is for myself! 😆

👀