What kind of tutorial? A programming tutorial?
No the outputs have to be less than the inputs
I'm not sure, do you have ublock origin installed? Sometimes that breaks it
The short answer is no, if Alice sends money to an address where Bob has a key, Bob can lock her money up forever and there's nothing she can do to prevent that, even if Alice *also* has a key.
The long answer is, ok there is something Alice can do to prevent Bob from locking up her money forever, it involves commitment transactions and it's complicated and not a built in feature of bitpac yet.
yeah that's a cool idea
I thought about making it bicameral. E.g. a "lower chamber" with 50 people in it and an "upper chamber" with 10. For any money to move you need 51% of the "lower chamber" plus a 2/3 majority from the "upper chamber." Something like that might be cool.
"based on their respective contributions to the organization"
Yeah like somehow make it so that if you contribute 25% of the money you get 25% of the voting power -- you might be able to do something like that by making a proposal that moves all the money into a new multisig where you have 25% of the keys, but everyone signs it with a signature that is only valid if a utxo exists which puts 25% more money into the multisig. So everyone "clears" you to get more keys only if you contribute a proportional amount of money.
Tell me more, what type of granularity do you want? With a threshold multisig of 48 people (for example) I think you can get pretty granular:
- A 50% vote requirement can be achieved with a threshold of 24
- 50% + 1 is equivalent to 25
- 67% is equivalent to 32
- 67% + 1 is equivalent to 33
- 90% is equivalent to 43
- 90% + 1 is equivalent to 44
etc.
That seems pretty granular to me, but I suspect you mean something different?
My latest invention is Bitpac, which lets groups of bitcoiners vote on how to soend funds in a multisig
Does anyone have screenshots from last month when blockstream used zaps to advertise? I'm making a presentation and I want a slide with pictures of people who got zapped and thus saw blockstream's advertisement
A sidechain for domain names is cool because sidechains are typically cheaper than bitcoin
But technically you can do this on bitcoin too (it just costs more)
No they just enter their delivery address
The merchant can include shipping costs in the overall price
nostr:npub1yxp7j36cfqws7yj0hkfu2mx25308u4zua6ud22zglxp98ayhh96s8c399s just need to add a shipping price option and perhaps a "shipment details" spot for customer to input their address.
Looks good.
Thanks! Btw I do have a shipment details field, it's on the checkout page and it doesn't let you check out till you fill it out
I promised more info/pics about the BTC Farmers Market and here it is
Join us on July 1 for the next one! Let's build a bitcoin circular economy together!
https://nostr.build/av/eba683bd346647523d56d47051c8aac65407ea2e7192785f5f0816917409f062.mp4
Looks like a bad thing happened. Since you lost your connection to your relay *while paying,* it did not send a message to the merchant telling him about the sale. (The sale info is sent separately from the payment because it is sometimes too much to include in an invoice memo.) So the merchant received your money but did not receive a notice of a sale. They therefore do not know where to send the NFT.
When a user loses their connection to the merchant's relays, the site is supposed to try to re-establish the connection automatically, but it warns the user that if it repeatedly fails they should refresh the page. I don't know how to prevent this from happening *while a payment is in progress.* Connection failures are unpredictable, but detectable, and automatically reconnecting does not always work, which is why I warn the user that they may need to refresh the page. I think I need to detect if a connection failure happens while the user is on the payment page and then cache their order info so that if they do refresh the page, the page can submit the order info once it reloads.
Sorry guys! But thanks for helping me find bugs.
It's a monthly farmer's market we're starting at PlebLab in Austin, TX where we try to build a circular economy for bitcoin. Today was the first one! Four vendors got set up with a magic webstore and received sats via the base layer, lightning, & cash app. More pics & info soon!
Colorized photo of me selling pizza at the BTC Farmers Market today. It was an absolute blast! Used magicwebstore.xyz as a point of sale and sold over $120. Seamless experience! Other goods sold included homemade chocolate, 3d printed lizards, and kombucha.

I support dressing up as a wizard and dancing around
Even when udi does it


