Please give a warm welcome to @Richard S Sutton, father of reinforcement learning, winner of the 2024 Turing Award, and author of The Bitter Lesson (http://www.incompleteideas.net/IncIdeas/BitterLesson.html).
daniele
_@dtonon.com
npub10000...vwqk
Working on https://fevela.me, https://nstart.me, https://njump.me, https://oracolo.me and other inspiring nostr projects. I love to build helpful things that people are pleased to use, mixing tech, design, usability and accessibility.
One year ago I proposed a "stacked users" design/UX (note mentioned at the bottom of this note). It was appreciated but I didn't see any real implementation of it, so I finally decided to build it on my own, but instead of creating yet another nostr client, I picked Jumble and added it as a new "Grouped notes" mode:
Main features:
- Pick a custom timeframe (default 24 hours)
- Filter out users that posted more than X notes; useful to surface users that post rarely
- Switch to compact mode to have a RSS-like feeling, to the delight of @fiatjaf
- See how many other notes the author published in the selected timeframe
- Compatible with the built-in filters
- Works also when browsing specific relays
I've been using this mode in the last few days, and I really like it, especially the compact version, since it offers a clean interface without any doom scrolling temptation. It also is letting me discover interesting content and users I forgot I followed that, for a long time, remauned hidden behind the more active ones on my list.
Try it yourself at
And give back any feedback, thanks!
@Cody should I open a PR? :)
View quoted note →
Main features:
- Pick a custom timeframe (default 24 hours)
- Filter out users that posted more than X notes; useful to surface users that post rarely
- Switch to compact mode to have a RSS-like feeling, to the delight of @fiatjaf
- See how many other notes the author published in the selected timeframe
- Compatible with the built-in filters
- Works also when browsing specific relays
I've been using this mode in the last few days, and I really like it, especially the compact version, since it offers a clean interface without any doom scrolling temptation. It also is letting me discover interesting content and users I forgot I followed that, for a long time, remauned hidden behind the more active ones on my list.
Try it yourself at 
Fevela
A user-friendly Nostr client for exploring relay feeds
Wednesday silliness. To make your invitate more friendly, I added the option to add your name. Try it at
View quoted note →

Create your Nostr account
Create your Nostr account, back it up, and get a Nostr Connect bunker URL in few easy steps!
And the #quote is doubly underrated, because it has all the value of the #repost (that sometimes can be quite lazy, let's be honest) plus your genuine thoughts.
I wold love a UI where I can just add some text and confirm a zap amount: the client generates the quote+zap events in one shot. This could be the real #boost.
View quoted note →
I'm a little sorry to said that, but Gboard's prediction and sliding typing have no competitors, their quality is outstanding. We need to offer more support to open source keyboards.
All social clients offer a "conversation" or "replies" view, and lately I found it more interesting than the main feed.
I think that adding an additional "first level replies" option would increase further the signal.
Do you know that you can personalize #Nstart to add your own suggestions to the final "Follow" step? It's a cool feature to onboard friends & family and to give them a polished feed from the start. But setting it up requires some tweaks, so I just released a wizard to easily create your own personalized URL:
Happy onboarding!

Create your Nostr account
Create your Nostr account, back it up, and get a Nostr Connect bunker URL in few easy steps!
Happy onboarding!Centralization is always dangerous.
Is anyone working on a package manager framework based on Nostr? It seems that Zig is doing something interesting in this regard.
@Zapstore maybe you could take a look.
Lobsters
Ruby Central’s Attack on RubyGems
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