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Kirk
Kirk@nostr.nz
npub16dvm...2dq2
Freedom Maximalist
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Kirk 1 year ago
"I'd like a cappucino: 2 shots regular coffee, 1 shot decaf, in the largest mug you've got" image
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Kirk 1 year ago
Nathalie is one of the highest character and brilliant people in Bitcoin (is she on Nostr btw?). This is a must-listen episode of WBD, with quite a bit of history I was unaware of of. The line "technologies (of oppression) that are employed in colonized countries always come back to the mainland" is going to stick with me.
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Kirk 1 year ago
I can feel the beginnings of a second Nostr adoption wave forming. There is a new energy 💜
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Kirk 1 year ago
My favorite feature of the old twitter was lists - being able to curate my own subject-specific feeds. I'd love to see this on Nostr. Especially with all the human rights activists joining, it would be great to be able to just create a list with all of their content.
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Kirk 1 year ago
I like to think @`Blockstream` has just put some seven year old in charge of zapping. "See all those lighting bolts? Click them all as many times as you can!" image
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Kirk 1 year ago
I will never understand this level of degeneracy. image
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Kirk 1 year ago
Coracle is the best desktop Nostr client. It's not even close.
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Kirk 1 year ago
Revisiting the Hong Kong of my childhood through cinema. image
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Kirk 1 year ago
The larger threat to Bitcoin is not core devs adopting a central planner mentality and trying to force through an aggressive protocol change. It's a lack of experienced developers familiar with the codebase, who are capable (and willing) to do deep code review on even the smallest updates. The inflation bug of 2018, for instance, was not the result of some radical soft fork. It was the result of a minor optimization to bitcoin core that got merged with barely anyone looking at it. Central planners are easy for even most non-technical bitcoiner to spot. What few seem to grasp is that by creating a culture that is hostile to developers - that treats every core dev as though they are an attack on bitcoin - you end up with insufficiently reviewed and maintained, yet vitally important software. The worst of all worlds. What we should do is welcome developers with open arms, assume good intentions, and trust ourselves to be able to spot anyone developing a Mike Hearn complex.