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plantimals
dd81a8bacbab0b5c3007d1672fb8301383b4e9583d431835985057223eb298a5
ΔC https://drss.io -- bringing back the republic of blogs. and onramp for bringing RSS content, including podcasts, into NOSTR https://npub.dev -- configure your outbox https://npub.blog -- experimenting with reading articles in a client-side only setup

I definitely plan on getting into cashu, but I do have a lightning address setup, plantimals@getalby.com

it's always my assumption that under every shitcoiner is a tarnished, not squared away yet, bitcoiner

Replying to Avatar ₿enjamin

gm

GM.

future costs are easier to calculate in a hard money regime. in fiat, you have to guess the rate of debasement, and underestimating it, which is the default if you don't consider it, hurts. where if you don't count purchasing power changes in bitcoin terms, you will end up considering the worst case scenario, which is usually better to plan for.

GM. moon shadows between moonset and sunrise

these people claim attention happens at ~10 bits / s. they also claim the raw sensory input, taking the bandwidth of the optic nerves and all the other senses, is 1 Gbit / s. the vast difference is made up by lots of salience filtering between senses and attention.

https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.10234

is anyone working on nostr native podcasts? I imagine an NPUB being the root of of a feed. with articles/nip-23 notes being the equivalent of "items" in a standard RSS feed.

the "eclosure" part of the feed, which contains the mimetype and URL of the audio file. I can see this being a reference to a file metadata note, kind 1063, with a URL and mimetype encoded in tags there. but I can also imagine a specific mp3 url tag, `mp3`, or something like that. the idea for not just including the link in the body of the article is so that a nostr-only podcast app could parse the audio file link out of the note without having to grok the body of the article.

any thoughts out there?

Replying to Avatar ben

#nostr

nostr is like the truck. if you lift the hood, you can see how everything works. no dealer lock-in, no proprietary tools required

is there a publicly accessible link to the original paper?

#asknostr

I'm doing some work on #nip-23 content, and am looking for a way to view articles published to a local relay, but not just the raw text, something that will render the markdown into html.

I will pay 2500 sats to someone with the first suggestion that solves my problem for an app that runs locally on linux and renders articles.

the conjunction of round, decimal numbers in the neighborhood of $1.00 / 1000 sats will be a nice mental onboarding opportunity for sat-native reckoning going forward