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Glenn
b8beebaac1fea45e8907a52b6d6a57707328276f2f000719de1cbe20b3b9fe80
Recording and re-recording sound.

Be careful #Bitcoin CEO doesn’t sue you for using proprietary data for training.

I don’t consider myself a real coder but I have found it useful for a few things.

- Generating regular expressions and string manipulation. It helps to give it an example or two of input and expected output.

- Generate some simple utility functions. Be specific about what you want the function to do and don’t have it generate something you don’t understand. If you do, you can ask it to explain the code, but it may be doing something in a naive way and/or not handling edge cases.

- I occasionally use it to explain or reformat chunks of code.

- It seems to be hit or miss on explaining Typescript errors.

He seems bullish on ordinal wizards and hanging with BSV shills.

I would love it if there was something I could point my clients to where they could upload their film projects, accept #zaps and interact with their community through #nostr. I just don’t have the skills to build it. πŸ˜‚

nostr:npub1zuuajd7u3sx8xu92yav9jwxpr839cs0kc3q6t56vd5u9q033xmhsk6c2uc nostr:npub1jlrs53pkdfjnts29kveljul2sm0actt6n8dxrrzqcersttvcuv3qdjynqn Question... I'm including a dice rolling (and more) bot into my application and I was wondering: Is it a terrible idea to build it as a SvelteKit API accessible within the application? I was thinking that the bot's nsec could be stored in a secret .env variable (like an API key) and the players (logged in with their own keys via Nip07) would send requests to the API which would return a roll result as a #nostr post. I am happy to take this discussion somewhere more appropriate if necessary!

Thank you to #[0]​ #[1]​ #[2]​ #[3]​ #[4]​ and everyone else for the great #ndk and #nostr discussion on #nostrnests!