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BTC Minstrel
5645874f1e8e9039a50681895cf4ab9527a79bf408685c79a752139c1de0da46
A shantyman for BTC. Occasional purveyor of cypher-funk. I save Satoshis, because Satoshi saves

What is up with the mempool right now?! People really paying almost 800 s/vb!! Or am I misreading the RBF feed?

Still, mempool is very full.

Replying to Avatar Wavlake

Congratulations to nostr:npub1evvphcukul8zyvz5tjkcqkyd7spahk4a95qapy0yuelf4y8e5kdshjmf9f for being the first artist on Wavlake to receive 1 million sats with her track "Cherry On Top" šŸ’āš”ļøšŸŽµ The future of streaming is here. https://wavlake.com/track/729ff127-1fcc-4086-8e67-4386e87ac585

Phenomenal. LFG!

nostr:note1v99kz9ekcpuzw5pnqar85h5fg369ehz6jtuc84pw96lfme9jy6sqr7tl84

The line between good and evil runs through the heart of every man.

And so this ripples upward to the social structures man creates. This we see the cycle of empire follow a predictable path.

It’s important we separate the temporal character of the late stage American empire from ā€œthe idea of Americaā€ as envisioned at its founding and in its golden era.

These are a distinct set of ideas (or ideals) which serve as intellectual patterns of value to guide us.

Right now the ā€œidea of Americaā€ seems to shine brightest in El Salvador, frankly. nostr:note1lt233ypjxlh5njhe7k8puk8ctwpv0sw4s0c70uz67weuyc9r83xqexgn2m

America is not a static thing across time. It represented different things to different people at different points in time.

Perception shapes reality.

We should frame our history in a way that enables us to effectively move forward rather than shackle us to the past.

T minus 60 minutes and the Minstrel goes live on @`vidaislive` making Bitcoin beats in the moment.

Join the stream and broadcast your thoughts into the chatpool and perhaps I'll mine them into one of my musical blocks.

Happing at 9pm Eastern.

https://vida.live/room/wqI269l3I

T minus 60 minutes and the Minstrel goes live on nostr:npub1g2eak89f7ul2scwv5866na6d4huhkml488xlwgkv4ctprxg8mlnq0k8cz7 making Bitcoin beats in the moment.

Join the stream and broadcast your thoughts into the chatpool and perhaps I'll mine them into one of my musical blocks.

Happing at 9pm Eastern.

https://vida.live/room/wqI269l3I

T minus 60 minutes and the Minstrel goes live on nostr:npub1g2eak89f7ul2scwv5866na6d4huhkml488xlwgkv4ctprxg8mlnq0k8cz7 making Bitcoin beats in the moment.

Join the stream and broadcast your thoughts into the chatpool and perhaps I'll mine them into one of my musical blocks.

Happing at 9pm Eastern.

https://vida.live/room/wqI269l3I

T minus 60 minutes and the Minstrel goes live on nostr:npub1g2eak89f7ul2scwv5866na6d4huhkml488xlwgkv4ctprxg8mlnq0k8cz7 making Bitcoin beats in the moment.

Join the stream and broadcast your thoughts into the chatpool and perhaps I'll mine them into one of my musical blocks.

Happing at 9pm Eastern.

https://vida.live/room/wqI269l3I

T minus 60 minutes and the Minstrel goes live on nostr:npub1g2eak89f7ul2scwv5866na6d4huhkml488xlwgkv4ctprxg8mlnq0k8cz7 making Bitcoin beats in the moment.

Join the stream and broadcast your thoughts into the chatpool and perhaps I'll mine them into one of my musical blocks.

Happing at 9pm Eastern.

https://vida.live/room/wqI269l3I

T minus 60 minutes and the Minstrel goes live on nostr:npub1g2eak89f7ul2scwv5866na6d4huhkml488xlwgkv4ctprxg8mlnq0k8cz7 making Bitcoin beats in the moment.

Join the stream and broadcast your thoughts into the chatpool and perhaps I'll mine them into one of my musical blocks.

Happing at 9pm Eastern.

https://vida.live/room/wqI269l3I

T minus 60 minutes and the Minstrel goes live on nostr:npub1g2eak89f7ul2scwv5866na6d4huhkml488xlwgkv4ctprxg8mlnq0k8cz7 making Bitcoin beats in the moment.

Join the stream and broadcast your thoughts into the chatpool and perhaps I'll mine them into one of my musical blocks.

Happing at 9pm Eastern.

https://vida.live/room/wqI269l3I

T minus 60 minutes and the Minstrel goes live on nostr:npub1g2eak89f7ul2scwv5866na6d4huhkml488xlwgkv4ctprxg8mlnq0k8cz7 making Bitcoin beats in the moment.

Join the stream and broadcast your thoughts into the chatpool and perhaps I'll mine them into one of my musical blocks.

Happing at 9pm Eastern.

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Replying to Avatar preston

Drivechains

Alright people, we are playing a game of chess here. The one thing, the absolute one thing, we can't do is give up the king. To give up the king, in my humble opinion, is to mess up the base layer. This mistake would disrupt the delicate incentive structure that ensures sound money. That sound money pegs the extremely fragile credit markets and out-of-control G7 policymakers that are creating clown world with their CB fiat policies.

We don’t need the sound, pegged, money to move fast, we don’t need the money to do smart swoopty things, we just need it to be pegged, immutable, and digitally sailable to actually stop the madness of clown world.

By introducing a whole lot of technical complexity to the base layer and potentially screwing with the incentives all so we can connect to a bunch of centralized shitcoin projects is like playing offense with the king when you’re down 7 pieces and the other player still has their entire back row at their disposal.

A. Why the rush!?

B. Why not just go use Monero if you need that level of anominity in your transactions. Why do you have to have it in a wrapper via drivechains?

C. Why risk the king without deep understanding and testing of the technical risk and potential change to incentives?

The beauty of Bitcoin is you can build it and softfork it, and we’ll let the community vote with their nodes. BUT, I for one, have no use for drivechains (that doesn’t mean everyone is like me). And as a result, I will not be updating my node and running any attempted ā€œsecretā€ softfork updates by the miners.

Have the ETHtards taught us nothing?!

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

For reference, here are my main thoughts on the current Bitcoin softfork ideas/dramas to those who care.

For context with regards to wherever it might matter, I have a 12-year background as an engineer initially and eventually an engineering manager, including overseeing electrical/mechanical/software for an aviation simulation facility, but although I have written code here and there in my early days, I am certainly *NOT* a software engineer. My career work is on electrical engineering and multi-discipline engineering management, and my master's degree is in engineering management, with an emphasis on systems engineering and engineering economics. Any viewpoint I have is from an engineering/systems management perspective or an economics perspective, not a programmer perspective.

I follow multiple software Bitcoin experts on various topics, many of which disagree with each other, similarly to how I followed my various lead engineers when I was working in engineering management.

The U.S. Constitution is well-written but of course not perfect. It's a good document, especially after the amendments it has had. The most recent amendment was over 30 years ago, and it is minor enough that most people don't know what it is. The second most recent one was over 50 years ago, and that one is also pretty minor, imo, and most people don't know that one either. The Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and a then a handful of key amendments after that to fix key issues with race and gender voting and so forth, have been the foundational aspects of this whole Constitutional project.

In order to change the U.S. Constitution, you need both a supermajority in Congress and a supermajority among States. Good luck getting that. And that near-immutability is exactly why the Constitution is valuable. Even if it was better written and included all sorts of things I liked, if it were easier to change, I would consider it to be a *worse* foundation than it is now. The near-immutability is the critical part. A nearly-immutable good document, is a great document, if it serves as the foundation of something important.

When it comes to Bitcoin, the aspect that I view as being the most valuable is its near-immutability. We have a global open-source ledger foundation that gives us savings and payment/settlement technology. It makes hard trade-offs in order to remain reasonably decentralized. And yet, Bitcoin can settle more transactions per year than Fedwire does, which is the U.S. base settlement layer, which handles (not a typo) 1 quadrillion dollars worth of gross settlement volumes per year. Bitcoin does that function but is global, open-source, and has its own scarce units. Various layers can expand that scalability, (Lightning, sidechains, fedimints, custodial environments, etc). Certain softforks to the base layer may also add some new scalability options (covenants, drivechains, zero-knowledge proofs, etc). But those softforks present risks to the whole project, unless they have a supermajority of support and are considered to be of low technical+incentive risk.

When I was an engineering manager for my aviation facility, if I were to approve a major new change and help fund it, it would be because the supermajority of my senior technical leads supported it, and because they could convince me of it. Objective truth tends to be easy to share between rational people that listen to each other. In contrast, subjective things that are more contested of course tend to be harder. If I liked a new change but it didn't have a supermajority, I respected these divergent opinions and wanted to know why they saw it differently. Unless it was in an area where I was *specifically* the facility expert in (in my case, the electrical/control aspects within our organization's aviation simulators), I would never go with a minority opinion among my technical leads and override the majority of my technical leads.

One of the most common problems I encountered in my career was over-engineering. Not a single person knows every detail about how an aviation simulator works (which was my field of work). There are software experts, graphical design experts, mechanical experts, electronics experts, pilot experts, and then business experts that have to figure out what is valuable to clients and how to get the required stuff and how to make the whole thing economical and thus well-incentivized. Systems engineering, practically by definition, is the science of managing a project that is more complex than any one human mind can possibly understand. Any major project engineer/manager has to deal with this dilemma.

As it pertains to over-engineering, many people often have pet projects that they care about, or want to make really cool complex things, that are not economical or not robust. Endless changes can create endless complexity, which are hard to maintain, are less reliable, and so forth. The most beautiful engineering designs are often the most simple at the foundation. Complexity can exist in layers or silos built on or around that foundation, which reduces contagion risk to the simple-but-robust foundation.

In short, if you you can't convince a supermajority, then maybe your idea isn't right or needs more work. Maybe the problem is on your end. Especially if the supermajority that you need to convince are intelligent relevant people (in Bitcoin's case: software developers, node-runners, miners, capital allocators, etc).

And of course, foundations like the U.S. Constitution or the Bitcoin base layer are far more important than the engineering frameworks of some random aviation simulation facility, so the standards are higher.

So, how do I assess proposed softforks as someone who hasn't written code in a decade but tries to follow the designs and economics of various proposals where possible? I look towards technical leads, and look for a supermajority of serious stakeholders, and need the proposal to clearly make sense to me technically and economically.

I view Bitcoin as being valuable due to its near-immutability. That is the source of its monetary premium. And so as follows, from a project management perspective regarding what is among the most serious of all possible projects:

-The first rule of Bitcoin is you do not break Bitcoin.

-The second rule of Bitcoin is you do not break Bitcoin.

-The third rule of Bitcoin is you do not break Bitcoin.

-The fourth rule of Bitcoin is that, around the margins, you try to find conservative ways to improve Bitcoin that are clear enough to get a supermajority.

Therefore, my view on softforks is that I defer to the supermajority of experts I trust, while also needing it to make sense to me personally. I'm agnostic towards many softforks, since I don't have the detailed software expertise to be relevant between similar proposals. As proposed softworks gain momentum, I check to see if they make sense to me, and then look for a supermajority.

Bitcoin is valuable due to its near-immutability. If it can be changed by minority factions, then the relevance of the project over the long arc of time is limited. To the extent that it's going to be any sort of important base layer, that near-immutability, much like the U.S. Constitution, is critical. To that extent, any proposed change to Bitcoin is not just a software thing; it's an economics thing as well.

Therefore, if proponents of a given softfork try to find a way to push itself on the network without a supermajority of technical experts and economic actors, then whether or not I like it, I will oppose it. That's a way to turn me from neutral to opposed. Because that near-immutability is what I would fight for. I only support highly agreed-upon changes. Whatever small piece that my node, my voice, and my money can do, I err towards the near-immutability.

Excellent perspective. Thanks for posting.

Makes me think of that adage that all complex systems are built on top of smaller simple systems that work.

Or something like that.

How do I evaluate relays?

I see a long list of relay addresses. No clue why I should choose one over the other.

Also, how many relays should I be connected to? Is there a point of diminishing returns?

More guidance is need here.