Do it!
nostr:npub1dy7zsvk7jwd547xvmpptzlc9muhd64g7txvf60zwlxjyj4aj78as6hljz5 another potential participant?
gm #plebchain
Waking up with a big of a glow today. Time for a #longform post. #TLDR at the bottom.
So I've been participating in my first #nostrcypher thanks to the invite from @`Gek`. It's gotten me back in touch with a piece of myself that not long ago I was almost ready to completely let go of.
Like so many people, I've always gravitated to #music from a young age. #Piano at 5, #drums in elementary school, #guitar in middle school, a lot of #classical #percussion as I graduated high school and entered college. It was supposed to be my meal ticket, my soul, the whole deal.
But right alongside, I was fascinated with computers. My mom's job required that she have one at home since I was little, so I was super fortunate that we had a PC at home before Windows was a thing. I learned enough DOS to play some BASIC games my mom came home with.
Then one day she came home with a disk someone at her work told her I might like. It was called "Visual Player" and turned out to be a DOS visualization for MOD files. The disk also had a ton of MOD files. I spent hours loading up each MOD file and watching what happened when I loaded it in -- which, incidentally, included scrolling through the MOD code as the song played.
Eventually I discovered Impulse Tracker, which absolutely blew my world open. Suddenly I could open the MOD files in Impulse Tracker and reverse engineer how they were created. I could save the samples from the MOD tracks and rearrange them into my own stuff. I was instantly hooked and went down the rabbit hole hard.
I still have a lot of stuff I wrote with Impulse Tracker when I was in middle/high school. A friend of mine even surprised me with a CD he burned with it all of them on it -- which was one of my surprises to learn that other people listened to them too. It felt like a calling.
In parallel, I was playing drums in the school jazz band and also playing drums along to a lot of my favorite songs at home. I was super into metal and grunge and eventually nu-metal at the time. So I also started to pick up guitar. I discovered a thriving local music scene (how lucky was I?) and went DEEP playing in bands and going to shows. I made pretty much all of my lifelong friends during this period.
I ended up playing drums in a band called Trace Fury (very much NOT metal or grunge, but more like gothic piano-based stuff with two lead vocals) that was doing pretty well in the local scene. I was in college for Music Composition at the time, but left to give the band a shot. We got picked up by a manager who had just prior gotten another local band a multi-million dollar deal with J Records. Suddenly we found ourselves in a local studio cutting a demo we were going to shop to labels. I felt like I was living the dream.
The problem was that this was also where we had to bastardize our music to make it commercial-ready. It's not that I didn't still like it, but I didn't have the same love for it anymore. But I started to find myself loving sitting next to the #producer and being a part of that process. I ended up leaving the band, picking up a "cheap" Pro Tools rig and a few mics, and opened my own little pop-up studio in a storage container. It was a really fun time, but I didn't have the discipline to run a proper business. I did a lot of #recording, and there's a long story there, but suffice to say I got kicked out.
I had a couple stints at other studios in my 20s of varying quality. But to pay the bills, I picked up a job as a cable guy. That job went very well. I'm still at that company in a leadership role and it's sustained my entire life since.
Eventually I met my now-wife 12 years ago. We have two kids. Life is really good right now. But music got totally left behind in the process. I couldn't balance playing in bands, recording, working, and being a proper husband and father. It just became working and being a proper husband and father.
There's been a huge part of me missing for a decade because I couldn't balance it. I have so many half-done projects, and still have friends waiting for me to finish mixes we started years ago. I got very depressed and almost sold all my shit -- I actually listed a couple things on ebay and one sold, but I chickened out and didn't ship it (got the ebay slap on the wrist too lol).
I didn't mention that I also had a fascination with coding from a young age that I didn't properly explore, but it ended up helping me fall into #crypto and then #bitcoin a few years ago. Roundabout, I found #nostr, and very recently, #stemstr.
So I posted a song on Stemstr a couple weeks ago called "Room for Error," one of the few I had allowed myself to begin working on over the past couple years. I really liked it and didn't want it to die, so I put it up and thought "hey everyone, here's a thing I did. This site is cool."
To my amazement, almost immediately @`Gek`and @`manlikekweks`dropped VERSES for it. I was like WTF. This song is suddenly a thing again.
What followed was an invite to produce a beat for nostrcypher. I pulled out one I wrote like 20 years ago. And last night I was posting Alpha 3 on Stemstr with loads of community contributions on it: https://stemstr-client-ten.vercel.app/thread/887c9552f7ef2fa2118ae52eaddec0584d9527a5917bdb640026649376c6657c
Guys, I'm in heaven. I feel awakened. The huge missing piece of me is filling in. And it's all thanks to the nostr community. Thank you all. And especially, thank you to the army of #devs putting in all the good work. You are changing lives.
TLDR: I have music in my soul that I lost over the years, and nostr is bringing it back to life.
#grownostr
Tags didn't work properly in the post so tagging again here: nostr:npub1dy7zsvk7jwd547xvmpptzlc9muhd64g7txvf60zwlxjyj4aj78as6hljz5 nostr:npub1fnn2h0tgm2mwnl0kar5ez25wztum2w0q0rrrf326n0ljn999znwsqf4xnx
gm #plebchain
Waking up with a big of a glow today. Time for a #longform post. #TLDR at the bottom.
So I've been participating in my first #nostrcypher thanks to the invite from @`Gek`. It's gotten me back in touch with a piece of myself that not long ago I was almost ready to completely let go of.
Like so many people, I've always gravitated to #music from a young age. #Piano at 5, #drums in elementary school, #guitar in middle school, a lot of #classical #percussion as I graduated high school and entered college. It was supposed to be my meal ticket, my soul, the whole deal.
But right alongside, I was fascinated with computers. My mom's job required that she have one at home since I was little, so I was super fortunate that we had a PC at home before Windows was a thing. I learned enough DOS to play some BASIC games my mom came home with.
Then one day she came home with a disk someone at her work told her I might like. It was called "Visual Player" and turned out to be a DOS visualization for MOD files. The disk also had a ton of MOD files. I spent hours loading up each MOD file and watching what happened when I loaded it in -- which, incidentally, included scrolling through the MOD code as the song played.
Eventually I discovered Impulse Tracker, which absolutely blew my world open. Suddenly I could open the MOD files in Impulse Tracker and reverse engineer how they were created. I could save the samples from the MOD tracks and rearrange them into my own stuff. I was instantly hooked and went down the rabbit hole hard.
I still have a lot of stuff I wrote with Impulse Tracker when I was in middle/high school. A friend of mine even surprised me with a CD he burned with it all of them on it -- which was one of my surprises to learn that other people listened to them too. It felt like a calling.
In parallel, I was playing drums in the school jazz band and also playing drums along to a lot of my favorite songs at home. I was super into metal and grunge and eventually nu-metal at the time. So I also started to pick up guitar. I discovered a thriving local music scene (how lucky was I?) and went DEEP playing in bands and going to shows. I made pretty much all of my lifelong friends during this period.
I ended up playing drums in a band called Trace Fury (very much NOT metal or grunge, but more like gothic piano-based stuff with two lead vocals) that was doing pretty well in the local scene. I was in college for Music Composition at the time, but left to give the band a shot. We got picked up by a manager who had just prior gotten another local band a multi-million dollar deal with J Records. Suddenly we found ourselves in a local studio cutting a demo we were going to shop to labels. I felt like I was living the dream.
The problem was that this was also where we had to bastardize our music to make it commercial-ready. It's not that I didn't still like it, but I didn't have the same love for it anymore. But I started to find myself loving sitting next to the #producer and being a part of that process. I ended up leaving the band, picking up a "cheap" Pro Tools rig and a few mics, and opened my own little pop-up studio in a storage container. It was a really fun time, but I didn't have the discipline to run a proper business. I did a lot of #recording, and there's a long story there, but suffice to say I got kicked out.
I had a couple stints at other studios in my 20s of varying quality. But to pay the bills, I picked up a job as a cable guy. That job went very well. I'm still at that company in a leadership role and it's sustained my entire life since.
Eventually I met my now-wife 12 years ago. We have two kids. Life is really good right now. But music got totally left behind in the process. I couldn't balance playing in bands, recording, working, and being a proper husband and father. It just became working and being a proper husband and father.
There's been a huge part of me missing for a decade because I couldn't balance it. I have so many half-done projects, and still have friends waiting for me to finish mixes we started years ago. I got very depressed and almost sold all my shit -- I actually listed a couple things on ebay and one sold, but I chickened out and didn't ship it (got the ebay slap on the wrist too lol).
I didn't mention that I also had a fascination with coding from a young age that I didn't properly explore, but it ended up helping me fall into #crypto and then #bitcoin a few years ago. Roundabout, I found #nostr, and very recently, #stemstr.
So I posted a song on Stemstr a couple weeks ago called "Room for Error," one of the few I had allowed myself to begin working on over the past couple years. I really liked it and didn't want it to die, so I put it up and thought "hey everyone, here's a thing I did. This site is cool."
To my amazement, almost immediately @`Gek`and @`manlikekweks`dropped VERSES for it. I was like WTF. This song is suddenly a thing again.
What followed was an invite to produce a beat for nostrcypher. I pulled out one I wrote like 20 years ago. And last night I was posting Alpha 3 on Stemstr with loads of community contributions on it: https://stemstr-client-ten.vercel.app/thread/887c9552f7ef2fa2118ae52eaddec0584d9527a5917bdb640026649376c6657c
Guys, I'm in heaven. I feel awakened. The huge missing piece of me is filling in. And it's all thanks to the nostr community. Thank you all. And especially, thank you to the army of #devs putting in all the good work. You are changing lives.
TLDR: I have music in my soul that I lost over the years, and nostr is bringing it back to life.
#grownostr
No complaints! Just need a spreadsheet, for real. Let's light a fire under some Nostr devs but if my turn rolls around again and there's still no option, I'm holding my nose and using a damn Google doc.
I'm this link makes things easier to understand
https://fiatjaf.com/d36862b9.html nostr:note1z0sf3n7qdfqhfcsdvtysuczrqxr6jvc8zw7dn5dlqctf7mpwvd7s9zf3k4
No one can write to that relay?
mixing this in finally!
Nephew nostr:npub1e27hupmxjv42e69dtv9pcld2hqh09y72putfr7vdju4qsl7hnw8sue6mvv
Some more uncles for you to follow
nostr:npub1dy7zsvk7jwd547xvmpptzlc9muhd64g7txvf60zwlxjyj4aj78as6hljz5 nostr:npub1yauhh489aefdkzsewe5vj2u68elzxlsln7nn5yxr34e3c22vljdqkn7h9m nostr:npub1xv6axulxcx6mce5mfvfzpsy89r4gee3zuknulm45cqqpmyw7680q5pxea6 nostr:npub1vp8fdcyejd4pqjyrjk9sgz68vuhq7pyvnzk8j0ehlljvwgp8n6eqsrnpsw nostr:npub1ydcg5ah8pyxtzzxn86yqrlfkyckywhj5nxerawr7ae9rra8sz38qh03phy nostr:npub1e2wk36e9vg8uw40phrrkkhc4tax8a9ken3fjcyy63vmdyz9aee2sk9el27 nostr:npub10000000thpep7auj058803nqtymqlf3rw87lzhe6mkfeywnpxg5sjw7nql nostr:npub1chuth0ru5mq5pjeq6magew3kse4d5m7wgzqk3tnz0kgqwu3vt6ls5hq3gd nostr:npub1eequz6v23szzyx9utphsh8kg6kll50wte6sfh4vah8gdjtplcz6qg7at9s nostr:npub1ee6m4c35nqzv4f05m69w3am4hd2czd05zfzpm83jlz8yyfk969js78tfcv nostr:npub1f5x89j0mktrjf4canspfjr4keejq4cmdmcgxap8pxap3pu60cyasz48qrn nostr:npub1z0rrmak9v5drkr3a20e5pehrwzc5pf392apfl5t9h9qk928nay3s7wxuxf nostr:npub1l2h50te8u00qd6plx3hudn82p24lcafqmqhlayxy3h7dwsxxnj4q28n2lz nostr:npub1xq45evqkzv263r59q8vt9zzfcedencz807jf9gsmnhmj4khv65rqc3w72l nostr:npub1stemstrls4f5plqeqkeq43gtjhtycuqd9w25v5r5z5ygaq2n2sjsd6mul5 nostr:npub1yfg0d955c2jrj2080ew7pa4xrtj7x7s7umt28wh0zurwmxgpyj9shwv6vg
That’s a good start 🫡🤙
Thanks kweks!! 🫂
GM!!!
Last night I had one of my proudest moments as a Bitcoiner… one of my colleagues (who I orange-pilled) was able to orange-pill another physician! The second doc texted me today to get advice. He is ready to dive in and buy ₿ to put into cold storage for long-term savings (he currently holds some on Robinhood).
That's potentially hundreds of millions of sats getting pulled off exchanges in the next few weeks/months🔥
My orange-pilling friend used the same techniques that I used. WoS to show lightning's power and pique some interest. Then some education with a few episodes of WSB by nostr:npub1s5yq6wadwrxde4lhfs56gn64hwzuhnfa6r9mj476r5s4hkunzgzqrs6q7z
And wait.
It took a few weeks, but he now understands that Bitcoin is a bearer asset designed to preserve his wealth through time and space, and he’s ready to dive in.
I’ve seen lots of criticism for using custodial lightning to onboard and orange-pill because it introduces risk. And I’m here to tell you, you’re mistaken. nostr:npub1hcwcj72tlyk7thtyc8nq763vwrq5p2avnyeyrrlwxrzuvdl7j3usj4h9rq is just the beginning of a long journey. The education and guidance that follows is what matters, not whether you onboard someone with a custodial Lightning wallet. This doc is now reading the Bitcoin Standard and listening to nostr:npub1h8nk2346qezka5cpm8jjh3yl5j88pf4ly2ptu7s6uu55wcfqy0wq36rpev . He understands the difference between custodial and non-custodial solutions. He’s avoiding the hard shitcoinery lessons that many of us have experienced, and is on his way to becoming a maxi.
Ultimately, I will help him get to a place where he uses cold storage for long-term savings, non-custodial lightning for some spending money, and a small amount of custodial lightning for now, since it is the best solution to seamlessly onboard, get a lightning address, and use on #Nostr. When non-custodial solutions catch up, I will recommend them.
Please consider sending this newly minted Bitcoiner a few sats and a message to welcome him! I’m going to give him some time to absorb Bitcoin, but will be introducing him to #Nostr soon!
His address is:
publicdinner70@walletofsatoshi.com
🤙
Done.
You should set your lightning address to his for a day ⚡️
Who's going to develop a nostr-powered spreadsheet so we can properly organize this 🤣
Shit looks like it - I'll get alpha 2 up today

#nostr #meme #nostrmemes #memstr #zap #zapathon #plebster #plebchain #funny #Bitcoin #nostrich #everyone #sphinxter #stay #humble #stack #early #future #is #bright 💜⚡️💜