I was told that UX is one of the biggest problems in Nostr these days. What are people seeing that needs improvement?
If this is the case, it would not surprise me. Early on in an ecosystem, it's about maturing the tech and infrastructure to a decent point. Then it commoditizes a bit, and the user experience gaps become more prevalent.
Christoph Ono
gbks@nosta.me
npub1kuc7...0eyw
Designer & developer. Helping improve bitcoin design with many others at https://bitcoin.design . I write a weekly update at https://gbks.substack.com . ✌️
FOSS Backstage is now looking for speakers. It's a great conference. Take a look: 

FOSS Backstage 2026
Call for Participation
Open Source software is not only a way of licensing code but also a model of collaboration and community. At FOSS Backstage we want to explore the ...
There appears to be a competition of who's the simplest.
What does simple mean to you?
What does simple mean to you?~50% of mobile users have at least one accessibility setting turned on, according to this Dutch research. Dark mode, bold text, zoom, increased contrast seem to be most used. Good to make sure our apps support these. 

Accessibility Stats | Appt
Results from research amongst millions of iOS and Android users that looked at which accessibility features are actually turned on.
WCAG 2.1 color contrast guidelines are a bit of a disservice to design. Color and contrast perception is much more complex than two simple ratios for small and large text.
Modern operating systems have tons of features that allow users to adjust text size, contrast, etc. Perception changes based on ambient lighting and smartphones adjust the display to those conditions. There are also different font weights, and fonts with different characteristics (like the fine lines of Bodoni), as well as effects like outlines and drop-shadows. As well as different use cases - reading dense scientific material strains eyes more than a quick scan of some news headlines.
WCAG 2.1 is like a blunt instrument. It can be a good starting point, but it's not the end-all-be-all (APCA is a good step forward). A more sophisticated approach also takes these other factors into consideration. Unlike designing for print, screen interfaces can be super dynamic and responsive and adjust to whatever the user needs and wants.
If there was an award for least intuitive design tool, Adobe InDesign would be my clear favorite. Even after decades of occasional use, selecting things, changing a color, resizing an image, and other super basic stuff remains absolutely unintuitive and I have to keep asking AI for how those things work. Always makes me super appreciative of the latest generation of design tools.
Many social media replies are not actual replies to what was being said. People often use posts as springboards for whatever they want to say rather than actually engaging with what was written. Best to just ignore those?
Flashback to 2019 Casa SatsTags.


Well, I am excited to use my bitcoin wallet in the quantum realm.


Just tossing out some ideas as a first reaction to some of the stuff I learned from the Presidio Bitcoin Quantum Summit. Sounds like we might potentially need a lot of changes? All TBD, of course, as more research and consensus is needed, but interesting to start feeling this out nonetheless. Where are you on this topic?


Beware of the €5 wrench (although it probably costs a lot more that that size).


Not an expert, but this sounds like the next euphoria, collapse and downturn are preprogrammed due to greed and obnoxious financial games. Can we maybe please not? Or am I not understanding this correctly? 
Apple Podcasts
Are Bitcoin Treasury Companies Built to Last? with Marty Kendall | SLP674
Podcast Episode · Stephan Livera Podcast · 14/07/2025 · 1h 9m
Weekend. Good weather. Time to go outside. Have a good one.