@dtonon
150,203 sats stacked
stacking since: #80864longest cowboy streak: 5
by
for
Same notification here
you just eat meat, lift weights, avoid seed oils, and think you're going to be healthy forever?
I agree, it's quite weird. Just look for the healthiest and longest-lived populations and see what they eat. As far as I can see, in all historically meat is just a complement in a varied diet. Nutrition is not the only factor, but it is one of the main ones.
NIP-5 address is the solution, although it is not perfect because it depends on the centralized structure that manage domains.
I have mixed feelings about this. From a obvious point of view it feels absolutely bad spamming relays with fat notes, but if the relay is my one, and I'm thinking about the Gossip model here, it could make absolutely sense to have a unique source of truth for notes and their assets, that uses a unique protocol. Images are an important chunk within an information piece, so I would not give them to a generic third part.
A client could also offer its users a relay/web server/CDN layer to improve the images reachability and the download performances.
There is a proposed NIP-95 that is quite similar: https://github.com/nostr-protocol/nips/pull/345
Basically, there is no difference from being online all the time.
Chromium (degoogled) and/or Firefox (telemetry striped) plus Tor Browser is everything you need. With a such flourishing Bitcoin/Lighting ecosystem, point 4 is a damn cons. There are really no reasons to support a pro-shitcoins browser.
Yes, fascinating story, isn't?!
Make sense! Just pushed an update that add the -mute param.
(I will update the binaries asap)
I just added Nostr notifications via DMs. This is useful to run Stacker Beep in headless mode, either remotely or in the local PC with a background process, to route notifications to your preferred Nostr client.
Digital: USB with encrypted zip file (generated on an air-gapped system). Rename it to pdf to pretend it is corrupted and add a random of other stuff.
Analogic: keep a notebook with handwritten stuff and glued piece of texts, create a memorizable schema to recover the seed from it.
Backup: memory.
An HW receives a unsigned transaction from the wallet, signs it and sends it back. So first of all it is a computer, not just a dumb storage. The receive/send parts can be done with a cable connection, wireless (bluetooth) or better in a completely air-gapped fashion, so with qr codes or via a removable media (usually a micro SD).
So an HW is technically always offline. Even if it is compromised (hacked firmware) it cannot send the seed to a malicious endpoint. Unless the wallet on the main PC is also compromised; for this reason you should always use HW and wallet from different sources!
Instead, the first time you put your USB memory with a plain seed in a compromised PC, you are over.
My suggestion about HW is SeedSigner, paired with Sparrow. Search HM for more info. But don't trust, verify. Online there are a lot of resources from various companies about their products and the general operative logics. Thanks for time to study and learn.
The main goal of a HW is to keep the seed always offline, while make it available to sign transactions. Of course this cannot be replaced by a USB memory. Eventually a PC without any wireless hardware, that has never been online, can be a solution.
  1. Great!
  1. Because A) It is confusing for someone that is starting with Bitcoin have a new concept to learn, especially not USA shops that see a dollar sign. B) Many people don't like stablecoins.
  1. I mean in the details, where the space is not a problem. Maybe this is not the coolest feature, but all the new ideas have not been done by anyone, by definition, so...
The first I can think of:
  • The POS could be more compact, on some smartphone the final button is hidden and this can be quite confusing (real time noticed on the last business I orange pilled with Blink).
  • It would be nice to have an option to hide stablesats. Ideally it should be opt-in.
  • It's really nice that transactions show the original fiat value, but it would be nice to also show the % variation against the current value. In the long term a business can easily see how convenient it has been to accept Bitcoin.