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Muntasim Ul Haque
9466c52b7f873d56179ba147e1ca656a244cb7be347ac0fa4773861ae017213e
Lifelong Learner.

Sure. A developer should have his vision of how he wants his app to be. Your design goal makes your app stands out.

You can discontent/remove relays, that I know. But I'm not sure you can block a relay from appearing in global or other feeds.

It's the Mostr relay, if I'm not wrong. I'm not sure though if any client allows you to block a relay.

So if it comes down to only keeping the seed words safe somewhere, why don't more people use the self-custodial wallets? I'm talking in the context of Nostr and zapping.

I'll keep that in mind. So what are the upside and downside of using a self-custodial wallet?

Apparently, she's speaking from experience.

Replying to Avatar kidwarp

Yes

So is it not recommended for beginners?

Kiwi is a great browser. You gotta try it. Though I heard the developer will no longer maintain it.

About the mobile usage, these days people are using mobile more because it's always there with them. So developing apps with the mobile-first approach is a good idea.

Depends on your requirement and budget. Based on my experiences though, I would suggest either Lenovo ThinkPad or HP EliteBook.

Yeah I'm using #Nosotros on both desktop browser and Android browser.

I'm using the Nostr Connect extension for login from the Chrome Web Store in an Android browser called Kiwi. It's a great open source Android browser based on chromium and it's one of the very few browsers that supports extensions on Android.

So, while logging in, I click on the sign in with extension and then the Nostr Connect extension pops up and I just authenticate it and log in.

The real test of an idea is in its execution.

#Nostr365

If it doesn't add value, don't add it.

#Nostr365

Ha ha. We are still the early stage of Nostr and Nostr is in in its beginning too, so I think these mistakes don't count.