Doesn’t really matter. You just have to buy multiple pairs of the reasonably cheapest available while keeping your backups.
> fucking SBC
Yup. Cool and silent.
> root on an SD card
Yup. Durability doesn’t matter since I can rebuild the OS from a flake file.
> two SATA SSDs from the brand that I avoid for SSDs the 2nd most running btrfs
Those are setup in raid1 mode for the persistent data. BTRFS does self healing. I don’t think 1TB bitcoin nodes will last a lot longer than the warranty for these reds.
It’s also FDE with headless remote unlocking. These can use UEFI but no secure boot.
Not enough memory for UIs though. It will run core, LND and Electrs.
This confuses the nostr:npub12262qa4uhw7u8gdwlgmntqtv7aye8vdcmvszkqwgs0zchel6mz7s6cgrkj

What a nice desert planet. It would be a shame if it became covered in forests and grassland. 
I’ve been enjoying the silence.
I went back to running low power nodes because all I ever wanted all I ever needed is here in my ARMs.
Hokkaido gotta be my favorite place on earth. Everything is so rustic compared to the rest of the country. Most memorable memories are permeated by the scent of diesel and firewood. And the food… the roasted lamb meat, ramen, the beer! Eating Gengis Khan at Ginza Lion restaurant…
I headed north without a plan because the city had a funny name (it sounds like Wakaranai in Japanese). I really wanted to see Korsakov but no ferries were operating and my Japanese bro would probably have a hard time getting a Russian visa.
I visited Vladivostok a few years later. It was after the Ukrainian conflict of 2014 but before COVAIDS. The world was a bit more free at that time.

Not pulling this out of google by the way. I was there in Wakkanai a few years ago. Sadly no ferries operating. I had the chance to eat piroshki and watch Nina sing thought. ☺️ 
Seriously it’s the way beyond the middle of nowhere. Even if it wasn’t the gubbermint I doubt you could just get a flight to Sakhalin.
Get a train to Wakkanai and board either a ferry or a small plane to Korsakov.
Pretty much described the whole South American libertarian scene.
Bure > Rumba > Ringo
🎶 fuwa fuwa ru fuwa fuwa ri 🎶
No I won’t use ze FreeBSD.

Born just in time to have to worry about the temperature of your storage devices.


Please support the polish economy!
Introducing nsec.app and nostr-login!
I've shown the prototype of https://nsec.app in December, and it's essentially an nsecbunker in your browser. It is non-custodial - your keys are stored locally in the browser, and apps can get access to your keys using NIP46. We've now turned that prototype into a real thing, and I invite you to try it. Shoutout to nostr:npub149p5act9a5qm9p47elp8w8h3wpwn2d7s2xecw2ygnrxqp4wgsklq9g722q for the designs!
Now how do we help Nostr apps adopt NIP46 for remote key access?
That's where nostr-login library comes in. If your app uses NIP07 to talk to a browser extension, then with just two lines of code you can make it talk over NIP46.
Both of these tools support the new OAuth-like flow proposed by Pablo. Below you can watch a demo of how nostr-login (added to my fork of Snort) works with Nsec.app (or would work with any other nsecbunker).
What this all means is that people could join Nostr on the web, without installing extensions or mobile apps, with their keys stored non-custodially in the Nsec.app, and then could log in to other Nostr apps without copying their private keys.
Demo: https://void.cat/d/JSWwYMTtbWxTDTLpe132Kr.mp4
Links:
Snort+nostr-login: https://snort.nostrapps.org
nsec app: https://github.com/nostrband/noauth
nsec app server: https://github.com/nostrband/noauthd
nostr-login: https://github.com/nostrband/nostr-login
Would be nice to use some kind of U2F effectively storing the secrets on a hardware key.



