FOR NOSTR TO BE SUCCESSFUL, THERE NEEDS TO BE MANY GREAT APPS.

IF A FEW APPS DOMINATE, NOSTR LOSES.

It’s possible that ODELL is mistaken here.
 One feature present in many networks is that the distribution of their nodes follows a Pareto distribution (from Vilfredo Pareto, a 19th-century economist). It’s quite possible that apps linked to a network like NOSTR also follow a Pareto distribution, meaning there will always be a small number of them dominating and a large number struggling to survive. “Many small events coexist alongside extraordinarily large ones” (Barabási, 2010, p. 102). This distribution is also called a power law. This is also how the node distribution of many social networks works: there are a small number of them, or hubs, where most of the connections concentrate and which dominate the network, and a large majority with fewer connections.
 Human activity is usually neither uniform nor random; it is bursty and follows a power law. In many cases, “No matter what human activity we examined, the same bursty pattern greeted us: long periods of rest followed by short periods of intense activity” (Barabási, 2010, p. 104).

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

Pareto distribution rules social interactions and markets. We should treat it as such instead of trying to act like it doesn't exist.

Explains why Bitcoin is more powerful than Monero...

More powerful is a misnomer. Bitcoin can't do anything to monero and monero can't do anything to bitcoin so your point makes no sense.