Avatar
STEMr42
a6127969aa92cdb926fb8667223430da3c07939836d6b979881cb7649b3b2d64
#Bitcoin ⚡️ 💻 🛸👽🔭🚀📡🧬🔬 🧮⚛️
Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

What if humanity could find some alien tech and thus greatly accelerate its own technological progress? But what if that tech was hoarded by a small group of people?

Anyway, here's a review of Theft of Fire by Devon Eriksen. It's a 22nd century hard science space opera set in our solar system, written by a retired engineer. One of the more successful indie sci fi books in recent years. It's also one of the most successful books to have bitcoin in it; it's a small background role, but bitcoin is one of the leading types of money in the solar system.

Marcus, an indebted down-on-his-luck asteroid miner (and secretly, a bit of a space pirate as of late, given how bad things have gotten) finds his ship taken over by a wealthy genetically modified corporate heiress named Miranda. She has bought his defaulting debt contract that his ship collateralizes, and has gained admin access over his ship's computer. And she knows he is secretly a space pirate, which altogether gives her multiple types of leverage over him. She wants him to take her on a mission to the edge of the solar system to do something she won't say, involving unimaginable treasure, and he has little choice but to go along with it. Secretly, however, he plots how to regain control of his ship as they go, because he recognizes how much of a suicide mission it is because of who guards the space out there.

Pros:

-The hard scientific realism in the book is great. The type that basically takes an engineer to write. No wonder he has endorsements from like, the co-founder of Autocad and such. It's also a smooth read, all from Marcus's perspective.

-Although the story mostly takes place on one ship with a few characters, the worldbuilding is a solid start. I assume it'll be expanded later in the series. The technological situation and structure of society are very fleshed out relative to how little we actually see, given the tight setting. The world feels realistic and lived-in.

-High nostalgia factor. Fans of Firefly and Cowboy Bebop, and more recently the Expanse, and all sorts of classic sci fi literature over decades, will find a lot of references or similarities in a good way. The author is very well-read on the genre.

-The audiobook is pretty unique and great. Unlike most audiobooks, it has a full-cast production, meaning that each line of dialogue sounds like the person speaking it, rather than just one person reading a given chapter's narration and dialogue. I listened to this one rather than read it. You can only buy the audiobook on the author's website though, not Amazon/Audible. (Amazon/Audible have been kind of shitty to authors lately.) The other version of the book are available on Amazon.

-AI gets a really good treatment here, and the third main character, an AI, is my favorite character in the book.

-There's a lot of suspense throughout. Most of it is not really predictable how it's going to end since it doesn't follow a basic tropey structure. Even if you don't particularly like some of the characters (and indeed they're designed to be rather unlikable), you're likely to find yourself reading further to see what happens.

Cons:

-The book is about 500 pages, and I think 50+ could have been cut out of the middle to make it stronger. The dialogue between Marcus and Miranda gets rather repetitive after a while. And because of the limited setting (mostly on one ship), most of the worldbuilding is done via exposition by Marcus. So if readers hate "info dumps", they'll probably get annoyed at this. I personally don't really mind exposition as long as it's good, so this wasn't a dealbreaker for me (the "don't do exposition!" advice to authors is overdone in my view). I just think the middle could have used a trim. And although most of the book is not predictable, one aspect imo very much is, and that's where a lot of the repetition is.

-There are some unnerving aspects/scenes in it. I can't really say what they are without spoilers. Let's just say being in Marcus's head for 500 pages isn't, uh, my cup of tea. The book is self-aware about it, though. It's an intentional choice to have put these unnerving aspects in, so it's not a con per se but it's more something that will put off some readers. And it's a little more understandable by the end.

Overall, a unique story. And for the audiobook, I do think that over time more audiobooks will be made with this more complete type of cast. Audiobooks used to be very expensive and a small piece of the market, and only in recent years have they become very popular. As they become a bigger and bigger share of the fiction market up to some substantial percentage, I think more work will go into their quality and details.

Finally read this. Review is spot on. Audio is well done. Interested to see where this goes.

This “just buy and do nothing” conversation is on point. Seems like every week I’m telling someone…stop…no…what are you doing?…do nothing. They haven’t listened for a decade. Why is it so hard? 🫠🫠🫠

https://fountain.fm/episode/PzLSPgOaACeD1u67fP7I

nostr:nevent1qvzqqqpxquqzpa8rkl0p5cfa4a8x0fu2wx0dx4euwtt4czzpe2jp5np0yxkkx4wr64qmah

🍻 nostr:npub1fr0styg50xrcq9hs27wkm43kd56h6nr4lln746m304vfxadqganslul2sa

Did Extropic make an Infinite Probability Drive? And if so, does it create bizarre side effects? Certainly would explain a lot about the world today 🤔

https://extropic.ai/writing/thermodynamic-computing-from-zero-to-one

Always refreshing to hear Avi, excited and curious about real science, not just an institutional paycheck. Also, calling NDT a science commentator is absolutely hilarious, and true 🫡🍻

https://fountain.fm/episode/5yusgUPMeUEWvvgRcpfj

Lots of interesting stuff in here. Much of it a bit more contrarian from the usual industry takes. Great to hear some balance.

https://fountain.fm/episode/o9bJRFUEoSh9A8PENUNk

While I think the AI/UBI conversation is needed, I do think it’s a bit overhyped. I’m constantly impressed at the capabilities and also the deficiencies of these tools. I also remember Andrew Yang campaigning ~2019 that UBI was needed because all truckers were going to be imminently replaced by self-driving trucks. I’d say tick-tock vs phase transition, but not by a big margin. 🍻

https://fountain.fm/episode/v98jJ674gGLtgvo2g4uZ

nostr:nevent1qvzqqqpxquqzpptnk7k70m5myps2v94chuhap09zszvfsjuru7yv26e297tw0v3x298lur

Sabine always bringing open minded rational thought back to physics. Yes, 3I/ATLAS is weird. But sample size is 3. We should still be asking questions though.

https://youtu.be/g0dcuXxHRaA

One of the simplest fiscal dominance explanations from Lyn. Nothing stops this train.

https://fountain.fm/episode/6rupWTsxH64rHBtpEF7t

Replying to Avatar Derek Ross

**Amethyst is nearly my perfect *native* Android client for Nostr**

Over the last month I've tested out over a half dozen different Android apps for Nostr. Each week, I would be incredibly impressed with their progress, write a weekly recap of their features and enhancements, but in the end none of them were able to be used as a daily driver.

A long last, our **global nightmare** has come to an end. Amethyst was released to the Google Play Store for the world to download and install on January 25, 2023. Having a Nostr client running on Android means tapping into the largest market on the planet. **Roughly 75% of the world uses Android** on their smartphone. With Amethyst, Nostr was now able to be used by the masses.

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.vitorpamplona.amethyst

Amethyst is very smooth and fluent throughout the application, something other apps or even web clients are lacking. Amethyst comes with native image uploading, meaning you don't have to go and upload your image elsewhere, copy the link, and then find your way back to the app. Amethyst utilizes the popular Imugr.com image service for hosting.

Amethyst also boasts **link preview**, showing rich snippets for links that are included in posts. This is something that has become standard on social networks like Facebook or Twitter over the years. It's definitely a nice quality of life enhancement, in my opinion.

One feature that I don't use on other clients, because it's not included, are Public channels. Not all clients display these properly or even not at all, but they work like Telegram channel. They allow users to form a public group or collection of posts around the same topic.

As a power user with many relays, I'll say that most clients are slow and laggy for me. Astral and Snort are great clients and I still use them daily. Snort is my absolute favorite. I often switch back and forth between the two, because some features work better for me on Astral, such as DMs. On Snort, my DMs are very slow and mostly broken. This is a Derek issue though. On Amethyst, my DMs just work. I'm very happy to see them working as intended.

Amethyst is nearly perfect. There are three features that I use daily that this Nostr client does not include, at least at this time.

* NIP-05 display

* Lightning on posts and profiles

* Markdown

NIP-05 display is important to me, not because I founded NostrPlebs.com, but for identification. I believe this is very important for the community as a whole. I'm spoiled by Snort's implementation, seeing pretty NostrPlebs.com users throughout my feed. Besides this, every client out there shows this. It's commonplace and expected.

Lightning on posts and profiles is equally important. Nearly the entire Nostr community at this time is composed of Bitcoiners. Lightning integration allows us to use Nostr as a **Value 4 Value economy**, zapping, tipping, or paying users for their content and their contributions has become a way of life over the past month.

Markdown may not be important to everyone, but in my long form posts, such as this one, I like to include bold, italics, and bulleted lists. Most popular clients include these things.

For now, I'll most likely be using Snort while at home on my desktop or laptop, but when I'm mobile, my go to client of choice will no longer be a web client. I'll be using Amethyst.

*Things to report in a week: data usage and battery life comparisons.*

Does Amethyst have a default relay or relay list?

#[3] I like seeing the gm pop up in my feed. Scrolling through all the noise every morning your brain starts screaming nonsense at you and then there’s this signal bringing reality back. Sure I’m not the only one.