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Tom
2f5759825226f1d57ef1652ba66114b2f938f7f5c50dc505708e5d8b31e4f3c9

Biking with friends and dogs is one of the greatest experiences #bikestr #dogstr https://video.nostr.build/606a3b61852a56d50d0933de15c790fc0d3b144447415e8186f4ae9cbfc43659.mp4

Ahh the zap! Lol, no worries, thanks for the awesome pic. I love Snoopy (have had a Snoopy teddy since a baby) and that pic is a delight

Love cooking for you when I get the chance

Replying to Avatar Mindaugas

[Weekly Bitcoin Jobs](https://www.datawrapper.de/_/ZEETW/) gathered from career pages of #Bitcoin companies. We see that almost 2/3 of the #jobs are for non developers.

Want to learn more, check out the comments.

#jobstr #bitvocation

I remember the first time hearing this song years back, it's still sooo goooood

Replying to Avatar Colby Serpa

The introduction of a constant wasn't all that new or exciting at the time. After all, physics equations throughout history have involved random constants that express the strengths of various relationships. Isaac Newton's formula for universal gravitation had a constant, called G, that represents the fundamental strength of the gravitational interaction. The speed of light, c, tells us about the relationship between electric and magnetic fields. The spring constant, k, tells us how stiff a particular spring is. And so on.

But there was something different in Sommerfeld's little constant: It didn't have units. There are no dimensions or unit system that the value of the number depends on. The other constants in physics aren't like this. The actual value of the speed of light, for example, doesn't really matter, because that number depends on other numbers. Your choice of units (meters per second, miles per hour or leagues per fortnight?) and the definitions of those units (exactly how long is a "meter" going to be?) matter; if you change any of those, the value of the constant changes along with it.

But that's not true for the fine-structure constant. You can have whatever unit system you want and whatever method of organizing the universe as you wish, and that number will be precisely the same.

If you were to meet an alien from a distant star system, you'd have a pretty hard time communicating the value of the speed of light. Once you nailed down how we express our numbers, you would then have to define things like meters and seconds.

But the fine structure constant? You could just spit it out, and they would understand it (as long as they count numbers the same way as we do).

I'm not a fan of traditional social media and never really used it. I tended to gravitate towards reddit to pass the time since it was less about the who and more about the what.

Nostr feels similar in that people talk about ideas and concepts far more than the self indulgent stuff and I love it.

Thanks for sharing this snippet and link, fascinating article.

Yeah, he has multiple accounts, so to block/mute him now is a pain because he is posting from multiple free-to-create accounts.

This is why Nostr benefits, because it's another example of Andreas Antonpoulos' sewer rat and bubble boy https://youtu.be/RJWXaWu5MS4