I will shill myself first, lol. actually, I will add https://flycat.club/blog/97c70a44366a6535c145b333f973ea86dfdc2d7a99da618c40c64705ad98e322 (hodlbod) and https://flycat.club/blog/76c71aae3a491f1d9eec47cba17e229cda4113a0bbb6e6ae1776d7643e29cafa (rabble).
Also, I like this one https://flycat.club/post/29e0f527adb91b1f92d4de7806b100065201208842cd0b04e97f71f24f489935/eee74257 but the author seems not to use nostr anymore
I don't see comments on blogstack. seems not working. but I am sure that comments on https://habla.news/ and https://flycat.club/ are interoperable.
reading my nostr blog post on RSS reader 
as for the rss reader, i am not sure which one is best but i use https://netnewswire.com/ on Macbook since it is free and opensource
where do you post this comment? it seems the A tag for this post is not working. I want to make sure if there is a bug.
MQTT seems like machine-only messaging to me. integrating IOT to nostr relays will be like mixing both human and machine messaging together, sounds fun.
Put my money where my mouth is and implemented my relay "layer" in dialog form. You can now see colored indicators of which relay(s) a given note was seen on. If you click on one, Coracle will open a modal with the same feed you were looking at filtered down to just that relay.
The idea is that this will give you an idea of what kind of content differentiates relays from one another. See it in action below:
https://dufflepud.us-southeast-1.linodeobjects.com/relay-overlay.mov
https://blog.coracle.social/posts/2f375ecdcefa65f5d7d9ae5b74f3d276a6e2b2c9a4aafad50c48cc6be66407b2
# Version 0.2.23 changelog
- [x] Fix modal scroll position for nested modals
- [x] Fix memory leak in pool.subscribe
- [x] Use relays specified in bech32 entities
- [x] Add colored relay indicator to notes
- [x] Add relay-filtered overlay dialog to feeds
- [x] Improve relay detail header
I have similar thoughts. I already used wifi-bar-like signal to indicate the seen relays for notes on https://flycat.club/, will impl relay-specific feed later 
another small update on flycat: we support ogp for your nip-23 long-form posts. you can share meaningful link for you article like the following:

https://flycat.club/post/45c41f21e1cf715fa6d9ca20b8e002a574db7bb49e96ee89834c66dac5446b7a/213a705f
飞猫更新:现在可以为你的博客文章分享有意义的文章链接了,带 title/description 等 metadata
is that a crazy banana
Since tumbling down the bitcoin, rabbit hole, I have had a lot of fun experiences learning about bitcoin with a focus on mining. One of the adventures that I was fortunate to have was mining bitcoin, at an oil well in a remote location in Wyoming.
When I started mining bitcoin at home there were challenges to overcome as I knew nothing about electricity beyond the basics of installing light switches, changing, outlets, etc.
Mining at any scale beyond a handful of machines is quite a different experience. As you add more ASICS to your mine, the time that it takes to manage the operation increases, as do the problems that need to be fixed on a regular basis.
Adding to these complexities, we were operating on an oil well using a natural gas generator powered by the gas flare at the well that was burning off the wasted methane that the oil well owner had no way to bring to market.
This was one of the hardest and most fun things I've ever done.

The first thing that we had to do was get permission from the Wyoming minerals commission to run the natural gas generator at the well. The reason for this is that the state wants to maintain control and keep records of emissions.
This was necessary as the requirement to maintain emissions within a certain range was the only reason we were invited to operate at the well in the first place. There was no pipeline to bring the natural gas to market, and before bitcoin, burning it was the only viable option.
When we presented, the governor of Wyoming was there, and we got a chance to briefly meet with him and talk bitcoin.

We were given permission to operate and began installing our equipment at the oil well. For our deployment, this consisted of a 350 kW natural gas generator connected to a 16 foot mining container that could hold 100 S19’s.
For Internet, we initially chose a land based wireless Internet service provider. These are common in the remote parts of Wyoming, because the terrain is generally flat, and there is line of sight for the Internet service provider to establish connections. We actually ended up replacing this solution with a HughesNet satellite dish as Starlink was not available at this time. Mining bitcoin does not require a lot of bandwidth, and HughesNet proved to be more stable. I use Starlink RV for these types of deployments now as you can turn it on and off and use it at any location if you need to move around.

When we began installing everything, I thought that the natural gas generator uptime and maintenance would be our biggest challenge. It turned out that the generator was pretty easy. If the oil well was operating properly, then natural gas fed the generator and made electricity. We were mining bitcoin.
The biggest challenge we faced was the weather. Wyoming is flat, and the wind is unforgiving. When it's hot outside, it's blasting the intake fans on your container with hot air. If you face your intakes the wrong way, the wind is working against your fans, making that side of the container hotter. Even if you face it the correct direction, you're still sucking in hot air and in summer and during peak hot days, we were losing 10% to 20% of our hash because the machines were simply too hot to operate efficiently.
When it's cold out, it's still windy and when it snows it creates drifts that can be as high as the mining container. Support personnel have a hard time reaching the site as all the roads are gravel and the weather beats them down. Even the large semi trucks that come to take the oil have a hard time getting in during the worst parts of winter.

Even with these difficulties, it was an incredible experience. We had 100 S19’s running for a total of 10,000 TH/s. I basically lived at the well for a month while we got everything tuned and running smoothly.
This was a lot of fun to set up and run, however, not being local to Wyoming ultimately made the project unsustainable. We had a very low purchase price for the natural gas as it was stranded, however, we were leasing our generator and had a cost associated with another company to keep that running. We also had to contract a support person to go out to the site when necessary to change fans, reset machines and breakers and all the other little issues that happen at any bitcoin mine. This was a one and a half hour trip each way, and every time this happened we incurred a trip charge and time for the person to be on site. Communication was also an issue as there was no cellular service, and we had to direct the support person via chat.
We ended up selling the location to another company and moved our machines to an on grid location that ended up being about the same cost to operate when you factor in all the extra costs in Wyoming.
Stranded natural gas is an excellent energy source for mining bitcoin. The holy grail is to find a location where you can get the gas very cheap, own and operate your own generator and have that location be reasonably close to civilization to support it yourself or to contract someone else at a cost that keeps the project economically viable. If I had a natural gas well on my own land, I would set this up and let it make bitcoin 24/7. If you are one of the lucky ones that does have a well on your land, hit me up, and I'll help you install a bitcoin factory in your backyard.
About me:
Bitcoin only and aspiring sovereign individual, trying my best to homestead in the Ozark Mountains of Missouri and mine bitcoin on stranded energy in the Show Me state. I'm looking for like-minded individuals to help us build Bitcoin mines owned and operated by plebs.
Website: [https://bitcoinalchemy.io](https://bitcoinalchemy.io)
Nostr (GigaBTC): npub1f5qxsvu27hh8nsr9z0024upyjgj8h0m6h55lz9hxu5xptz4k5emsed576p
wow, this is the most fun blog post I have read in nostr so far! very interesting experience. Bitcoin is the most effective market for energy.
flycat updates: add rss/json/atom feed subscription for your long-form posts. on flycat myblog page, you can see the subscribe buttons. and here if you know relay that supports RSS I will add it to the select option here to let users have multiple subscription providers. you can visit my blog for an example https://flycat.club/blog/45c41f21e1cf715fa6d9ca20b8e002a574db7bb49e96ee89834c66dac5446b7a
飞猫更新:支持博客文章的 RSS/atom/json 订阅。这其实 relay 来做最合适,所以如果有 relay 支持我可以把它加入到这的选项里,这样用户可以选择多种的订阅服务商。

https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/blob/master/39.md better than nip-05
here is another counterintuitive idea I wrote in the article: a sign-in-with-twitter button on nostr(not a singing-in-with-nostr button on twitter)
