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elsat
17538dc2a62769d09443f18c37cbe358fab5bbf981173542aa7c5ff171ed77c4
Janitor

Nostr group chats coming soon™️

From the names hofman is a known Epstein “client”.

As far as I’m aware there is no business or economics vision, and there is a known “client” on the list. It could be the rest of the names are also “clients”.

Yes, and combine with remove bitcoin price talk 🙏🤲

New user experience for me: share out link on nostr:npub13myx4j0pp9uenpjjq68wdvqzywuwxfj64welu28mdvaku222mjtqzqv3qk opens a menu of different nostr apps, where I can open said note

I would have expected the share out link to generate a URL for external to nostr sharing.

Curious what was the design thinking around this decision nostr:npub1jlrs53pkdfjnts29kveljul2sm0actt6n8dxrrzqcersttvcuv3qdjynqn

cc nostr:npub1uapy44zhu5f0markfftt7m2z3gr2zwssq6h3lw8qlce0d5pjvhrs3q9pmv nostr:npub149p5act9a5qm9p47elp8w8h3wpwn2d7s2xecw2ygnrxqp4wgsklq9g722q

How about a value prop?

“If you add Utxo’s relay you will gain benefit X, and benefit Y.

Unlike algo by provider P, Utxo algo provides benefit Z.”

nostr:npub1utx00neqgqln72j22kej3ux7803c2k986henvvha4thuwfkper4s7r50e8 algo relay customer feedback: can you add a concise description in non-dev speak of what exactly is the Utxo algo relay, how does it work?

Screenshot below of current relay description.

cc nostr:npub1h50pnxqw9jg7dhr906fvy4mze2yzawf895jhnc3p7qmljdugm6gsrurqev

Blocked & reported

Comes with a logo and backstory 🐴

> Pokey is a talking orange pony who is the deuteragonist of the series. He is also Gumby's sidekick and best friend. His favorite food are tacos. He usually gives Gumby worrisome advice, but Gumby rarely listens to it. He first appeared in the 1956 episode, The Little Lost Pony. In most cases, he is voiced by series creator Art Clokey (though in the 1960s, the role alternated between Clokey, Dallas McKennon, and Norma MacMillan).

https://gumby.fandom.com/wiki/Pokey

Replying to Avatar verbiricha

paging nostr:npub1zafcms4xya5ap9zr7xxr0jlrtrattwlesytn2s42030lzu0dwlzqpd26k5

I posted it to find potential bugs in clients, it looks like both Amethyst and Damus have trouble with this big list.

There is a “backbone” that ISPs tie into. For details read how NYC mesh did it, and talk to them.

I vaguely remember reading how folks started their own rural ISP, although I cant find that article/website

Portugal redimido pelo maximalismo de picanha. baseado

nostr:note1xu54xdzen6jmf9t4x2ffp5l5lc3qu80jjr8pkrsrjgtlwt50e0eq0jctc2

I might just add some wheels on it

Replying to Avatar Terry Yiu

I took a small hiatus after Nostriga to deal with personal stuff and burn out, but I’m back at it.

For the sake of transparency, here’s a summary of what I’ve been up to with Nostr development since ~August 2024 with the grants provided graciously from OpenSats and the Human Rights Foundation.

Comingle iOS:

- Launched v0.1.0 with support for reading and creating NIP-52 calendar events and RSVPs

- Ran trial at Nostriga 2024 conference

Nostr SDK for Apple Platforms (v0.2.0):

- Added NostrEventBuilding protocol to enable code reuse for event kinds that share common tags

- Added support for missing bot, lud06, and lud16 fields in kind 0 profile

- Added support for NIP-17 (Private Direct Messages)

- Added support for NIP-19 (bech32-encoded entities)

- Added support for NIP-65 (Relay List Metadata)

- Updated RelayDelegate to support receiving any type of response

- Added Swift 6.0 tests in CI

- Fixed GitHub actions workflows to resolve deprecation warnings and to be runnable on PRs from forked repositories

- Fixed incorrect tests and lint errors

Damus iOS:

- Added Apple-powered translation popovers for kind-1 notes for iOS 17.4+ and macOS 14.4+

- Fixed broken QR code scanner

- Fixed localization issues

TODO in the coming months (not comprehensive and may change as priorities change):

- Comingle iOS: Fix relay connection and performance issues

- Comingle iOS: Add retries to event publishing

- Comingle iOS: Expand search capabilities to support nevent and naddr on relays that aren’t in the relay list

- Comingle: Explore developing for Android

- Damus iOS: Add support for automatic Apple translations iOS 18.0+ and macOS 15.0+

- Damus iOS: Add NIP-17 gift-wrapped direct message support

- Damus Notedeck: Figure out internationalization and localization plan

- Nostr SDK for Apple Platforms: Add NIP-32 (Labeling), NIP-36 (Sensitive Content), and NIP-57 (Lightning Zaps)

- Nostr SDK for Apple Platforms: Explore outbox model

💪💪

Replying to Avatar Bryan Jones

My engineer dad, who spent his time on better ways to enrich uranium at the national lab in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, suggested that my average math and decent art skills might be better suited for architecture than engineering. I followed the family tradition and enrolled at Auburn University College of Architecture Design and Construction. They had a program for less gifted dyslexic test takers called Summer Option, where you took your entire first year of design labs in one summer. I survived and thrived through the grind and, somewhere on the journey, realized my personal take on good architectural design is centered on recognizing life patterns and the ability to design the stage and context for the patterns to happen in a cool way. I had a gift for pattern recognition and enjoyed creating "cool as shit" designs as we baby architects described them.

Architecture is perfect for me. As an architect, you are the person people ask for help to change how they want to live. You listen, observe, analyze, and come back with ideas on how best to effect change in that location. You exchange value to explore people's lives and help them set the stage for pure life. Living in good design can be life-changing for clients and rewarding for the team that helps make it happen.

After working for a challenging boss for eight years at a national corporate interior architecture firm, I had enough experience to realize that my project ideas were as good as my boss's but would be more personally entertaining. I went on my own in the last century, initially bootstrapping enough work to live, working with a college best friend. I would commute from Atlanta to Birmingham and couch surf in his apartment Monday through Thursday, selling to friends and my buddies' fraternity brothers. (Thank you to the Auburn chapter of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon). We kept it up for a year and then split up.

I returned to Atlanta and kept grinding on in-town custom renovation projects until I had an opportunity to do a build-to-suit office project for a client investor. I found a university mate with experience for the first commercial project, and we started Jones Pierce in 1998. Twenty-six years later, two studios continue to work with individuals and their homes, businesses, foundations, clubs, and personal investment properties.

I am most proud of my professional accomplishments when we receive testimonials about a project that changed someone's life. Clients write us letters, give us hugs, and call back ten years later. It never gets old.

Several projects have challenged me personally over the years. A design for a residence led to Passive House certification in [Yestermorrow, Vermont](https://yestermorrow.org/). The [Joachim Herz House](https://www.joachim-herz-stiftung.de/en/funding/transatlantic-exchange/joachim-herz-house) for the Herz Foundation was our first project with an international foundation. [Druid Hills Golf Club](https://www.dhgc.org/Club/Scripts/Home/home.asp) master plan and the first building phase is our first club project. All these were project types outside our focus but within our capabilities.

Our proof of work over time also caused the most personal growth and expanded opportunities over a longer time horizon. I love what I do for groups and clients who design personal spaces and places. I am honored to lead my studio tribe, which loves what we do, and the constant grind to improve as much as I do. Over time, the clanging projects came, and we pivoted and captured learnings to improve our processes.

Our pivot points came as we practiced. I hate to use the C word: CRAFT. Learning how to design for owners to spend their cash instead of the unavailable fiat in the housing crash. Improving our delivered projects by designing in [high-performance ](https://www.jonespierce.com/residential-projects/southern-modern)building standards. Figuring out how to adjust our process in milestones to evolve the design budget simultaneously and allow clients to consider their [mindful investment](https://www.jonespierce.com/residential-projects/urban-forest-mod) of a lifetime. Establishing methods to help property buyers evaluate remote properties to pick the right one to achieve[ site-actualization](https://www.jonespierce.com/residential-projects/level-up-house). Evolving principles developed to work with the individual to groups of individuals in clubs or [foundations](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jfbMZ_QHiQg). Combining the personally learned principles of Bitcoin with the principles we use to produce our architecture for the sovereign individual.

An architect on nostr!

Welcome 💪🤝

I’m open to ideas on how better to reach the dev team.

I tried to be objective in providing rationale, technical documentation, and social proof on why nostr migration is to the X business benefit.

If you have a better effort, I will be the first to support it.