Watching this thread.
This is one of the most annoying decisions I have had to make for a nostr-ish thing I have been working on for ages. My final solution was to just make the first byte a version so I can pretend that it won't just be Json forever.
The nice thing about quantum mechanics is that most of us don't understand it well enough to prevent us from using it as a clever analogy for other phenomena that we also don't understand.
For instance, while writing the previous post I decided that the female propensity for existing in a superposition of decision states is what allows them to be superior multi-taskers.
The mind-boggling part is how they can maintain the superposition of a world where they completed task A and another where they completed task B even after I collapse the wave function by observing completed task C.
It is kind of incorrect to say that Rust doesn't have null. The Option Enum has a None variant that gets used all the time. What Rust doesn't have is nullable types. Instead it adds 'Some' as a sort of "not null" this forces you to always handle the null case by forcing you to handle the not null case.
Just because this holds between my wife and I doesn't mean that it is true.
My daughters for instance are almost perfect sources of entropy. In fact given a choice they managed to exist in a superposition of decision states. Given enough daughters I should be able to implement schor's algorithm.
One thing that impresses me about the sacraments is that they have been hardened against every possible technology attack simply by requiring them to be in person.
I somehow initially read that as Life is Beautiful with Terrence Howard. Luckily my confusion lasted less than 3hrs 9min.
Why would someone on the fence concerning learning rust choose to learn react instead? They aren't even the same category.
The material difference is that the latter violates the natural law but former violates a sacred covenant.
They shouldn't have to redo marriages. The priest is the officiant but not the minister of the sacrament. The couple themselves administer it, having a priest present at all is merely a current discipline of the church to prevent abuse.
People who are good at commitment turn out to be good at commitment.
I would like to think there is a causal relationship as well, but it would be interesting to compare to something like Lions Club membership.
While I don't think that statistic is available, it is kind of funny that it can be approximated by a chart you posted earlier. If we consider devout Protestants as directionally secular commitments with respect to devout Catholics we do see a causal relationship.

I for one, would like to see the numbers for only true Scotsmen. 😉
As a Catholic not exactly libertarian, I endorse this. The only death that I don't mourn is that of a saint at the close of a life well lived. For religious types celebrating the death of someone you consider evil is a grievous crime. Your eternal brother is perhaps lost and you celebrate?! What greater loss, what greater evil is there?
You could tie ratings and reviews to a receipt. Maybe specify a separate portion of the invoice and receipt that is signed apart from the price or other sensitive data, so either party could "prove purchase" along with the review.
This doesn't stop them from creating false reviews if they are in cahoots with the "buyer" but those wouldn't show up in your web of trust.
It will be, if you can solve logistics/customer service.
A seller should be able to ship a box of stuff to an address, make a listing and then collect satoshis as orders roll in. On the flip side they should be able to pay someone to handle returns and other customer service issues.
If they do decide to handle everything themselves, the User experience should be the same. That way we can have competing drop-shipping services plus DIY all in one interface.
Too many movies end with the storybook wedding. We need entertainment where the married folk aren't supporting characters or on the verge of divorce.
3D printed laminar flow. https://video.nostr.build/4c6f44a3a79f498c654b1dc7dfddc4fb0bd8afd4c60e960f1b7ffb3b1451c982.mp4
All fair points. That happens on average. But what about you? What about your girl friend? Are you average? Are you content to be average? Maybe you are someone who can go into it with eyes wide open and so your "yes" will mean something. You know the risks so when trials come you aren't going to bail, you are going to have difficult conversations, you are going to make sacrifices for the, demand sacrifices of the other, and just do what it takes for love.
The people who can do that are modern heroes. They give their children and the children of families around them a rock and island of stability. The next generation needs that.

