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The node is in the phone.
Pheonix does everything pretty automatically. You just have to understand what inbound and outbound liquidity are
Blixt (because it doesn't force you to only connect to one node/LSP like pheonix does) requires actually opening your own channels, but once you take a stroll through all the menu options and think about what they do, its actually pretty straight forward.
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Both are non custodial wallets? Right? Pheonix must be easier to connect for a newbie?
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311 sats \ 7 replies \ @ek 22 Oct
You can’t connect Phoenix to SN for sending and we don’t support BOLT12 for receiving yet.
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Thanks for clarification.
Can we connect Blixt?
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11 sats \ 4 replies \ @ek 22 Oct
I don’t know but looking at the features, it doesn’t look like it.
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Which one is the easiest solution? How about about Blink or coinos + ⚡ address for a newbie to start with?
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I'm using blixt for autowithdraw now....
How is the new system working? You just need an LNURL right? I guess to zap posts you'll need something else
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @ek 22 Oct
Does blixt have lightning addresses or how did you attach it?
How is the new system working? You just need an LNURL right? I guess to zap posts you'll need something else
you need to have one of these wallets/protocols that can send for zapping
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Yes Blixt has lightning address. My blixt lightning address is nerd2ninja@blixtwallet.com
They call it "lightning box"
Its only a PR away! (Not really I'm meming)
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Both are non custodial. The node is in the phone. They are neutrino lightning nodes on your phone.
Yes Pheonix is easier, but they pulled out of the US market because of perceived compliance issues (they didn't understand what the Samourai lawsuit meant for their business and decided to just run from it rather than accept the risk). Because of this, I also recommend looking into Blixt.
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