"Conventional" 😂
Thanks for reframing that though. Will need more context to fully start grasping this though. As in, how can 1 relay alone be an IP "decoupler"?
And agree, Pablo and Gigi have no idea what they unleashed.
Applying the conventional wisdom that event queues are decouplers, this would make relays the decouplers. But decoupling is pointless if you don't have actors, which is what DVMs are. It's a beautiful architecture nostr:nprofile1qqs04xzt6ldm9qhs0ctw0t58kf4z57umjzmjg6jywu0seadwtqqc75sprpmhxue69uhhyetvv9ujucm4wfex2mn59en8j6f0qyfhwumn8ghj7mmxve3ksctfdch8qatz9uq3uamnwvaz7tmwdaehgu3dwp6kytnhv4kxcmmjv3jhytnwv46z79z4kue discovered.
"Conventional" 😂
Thanks for reframing that though. Will need more context to fully start grasping this though. As in, how can 1 relay alone be an IP "decoupler"?
And agree, Pablo and Gigi have no idea what they unleashed.
I'm just talking in software engineering terms, if you want to decouple two services, you can put a queue in between. "IP decoupling" is a more abstract concept (and sort of a misnomer I'd argue), but if you wanted to apply the metaphor the role of the queue would be played by the onion routing implemented by DVMs. Anyhow 😂
Got it 😉 Thanks man!