when I can benefit from that, maybe. Like job application.
otherwise no
Tell me why I'm wrong when I say that nostr is not a "protocol". It's still http protocol.
Nostr is a higher level protocol; kind/data structure standardization effort. like ISO or something...
Only in sense of exchanging data. the protocol. The app needs to undrestand data structures to operate.
Like curl can deal with http or dig with dns records. It doesn't know what to do with the data.
Frankly, I don't understand why I should choose nostr protocol instead of say dns (it's binary, fast, can hold arbitrary data and supports queries).
I don't understand how these two things are interchangeable.
I can imagine a private relay responsible for "proxying" traffic to apps (be it docker or native or whatever).
Yeah, I'm sorry for not mentioning it!
pnpm is practically drop-in replacement for npm. obviously it's not that drop-in in all cases.
npm -i pnpm
58k is my fault. My wife just asked me to buy some coins with extra cash he got at work.
Went down after the buy like a clockwork
Tru.
It's been a long time to even get https as a norm.
There's plenty other things to improve.
But we learn and adapt.
Hands up who remember Thunderdome 1997
Oh, I meant desktops and home connections.
I'd hasitate to use phone for anything requiring privacy unless it's a pocket cash.
Imei (or a fingerprint) afaik are better way to identify you then ip. but with virtual providers and esims it's probably much harder for analitics.
still plausible
Kousek? to musĂš celĂ˝. je tam pĹ™ekvápko!
side note:
majority of devices do not have a public IP. So you're also hiding behind NAT.
I'm quite sure that my ISP is incompetent enough to fail to provide information leading to my MAC adress.
It's possible but I doubt it.
dane sú krádeže
vĂc neumĂme. di pryÄŤ