It's finally here! I've been nagging you guys about this like forever, now it's out and ready to download.
Ladies and gentlemen...
π« #NoorNote! Together with #NoorSigner! π«
For Linux and Mac. Download it here:
Here's a snippet from the feature list:
π Spotlight-like search - Search by Event, Username, npub and full-text. With built-in browsing history. Quick access to anything with CMD+K/CTRL+K
π Search in npub - Search for keywords within a specific user's posts
π Rich Bookmarks - Drag & drop sortable lists with folder organization
π Custom Bookmarks - Bookmark any URL, just like in a browser
π Mute Threads - Say bye to hell threads
π Follow lists - With mutual badges and zap balances
π Quoted reposts - Shown in note's replies
π Article notifications - Get notified on new articles per user
π Analytics per note - See who liked, reposted, quoted, replied, or zapped
π Thread mention alerts - Get notified when someone replies to a note you were mentioned in
π Local list backups - Manual NIP-51 list management, never lose your follows, bookmarks, or mutes again
π Multiple NIP-05 support - Add multiple verified addresses to your profile
π Safe NWC string storage - Stored in keychain (macOS) or Secret Service (Linux)
And here are a few screenshots:
First release, let me know about any bugs. Hit me up right here on Nostr or on GitHub, whatever. I'm gonna go party first.
Jumu'ah MubΔrak! Ψ¬Ω
ΨΉΨ© Ω
Ψ¨Ψ§Ψ±ΩΨ©
GitHub
GitHub - 77elements/noornote
Contribute to 77elements/noornote development by creating an account on GitHub.
GitHub
Releases Β· 77elements/noornote
Contribute to 77elements/noornote development by creating an account on GitHub.

Jumu'ah MubΔrak! Ψ¬Ω
ΨΉΨ© Ω
Ψ¨Ψ§Ψ±ΩΨ©


Step 2: Even though you've already downloaded it, the browser doesn't write it to your hard drive. It yaps about "trust" and stuff. You have got to click "Show more."
Step 3: Only then do a trash icon and a three dots icon show up in the download bar, but just on mouseover.
Step 4: If you click the three dots icon, a context menu pops up, and one of the five options is "Keep."
Step 5: But that's still not it. Another popup comes up where you have got to click the three dots next to the "Delete" button.
Step 6: There, a pulldown menu opens with "Keep anyway" in the nicest design.
Step 7: NOW it finally writes the file to your downloads folder and generously lets you run it.
So you run the setup. But hey, Windows isn't done yet.
Step 8: A blue window pops up yapping about "Defender Smartscreen" with only a "Don't run" button. It's the same blue as the Blue Screen of Death. If it wasn't, they'd probably make it flash red and orange.
Totally user friendly and logical, right? You have got to click the "More info" link...
Step 9: ...so the "Run anyway" button shows up.
Step 10: And only then does the setup program start.
That's some top notch dark UX.
So, what's the deal? I didn't buy a code signing certificate. That costs about 300 to 500 Euros a year. A year! That's why my app got this special treatment.
At the same time:
- Windows 11 Copilot/Recall takes screenshots of everything you do
- Telemetry is almost impossible to fully turn off
- Cortana, OneDrive, Microsoft Account get shoved down your throat
Apple's got a similar system:
Gatekeeper plus Notarization
- Unsigned apps: "Can't be opened because the developer can't be verified"
- User has to right click Open or allow it in System Settings
Costs:
- Apple Developer Account: 99 bucks a year
- With that, you can sign AND notarize (Apple checks the app automatically)
Difference from Windows:
- One time 99 bucks a year for everything (not per certificate)
- Notarization is automated (no hardware token needed)
- Easier to integrate into CI/CD
But:
- Apple reserves the right to remotely block apps
- M1/M2 Macs are even more restrictive
- For open source, Apple's actually a bit cheaper and easier than Windows. But it's the same principle: Pay up or your users see warnings.
Ubuntu Linux has a warning in its app center too, but it still lets you install the software easy. And 'sudo dpkg -i filename.deb' still works in the terminal with no warnings.
It's 2025. This is the state of our home computers.
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Starting today, there's a Nostr desktop client for Windows. And a key signer too. I didn't think it would actually work, especially the communication between the two, #NoorNote & #NoorSigner.
The Linux and Mac versions were pretty easy, but the Windows one was totally worth the effort. Not because it'll reach more people, but because it'll make NoorSigner stronger and more stable. Because Windows = weak system. So NoorSigner and the pipe connection between them have to be more stable.
Linux and Mac are stable systems. They've kinda spoiled NoorSigner. Not such big demands on stability when the underlying OS is already solid. Weak systems make strong apps or something.
Anyway, Windows has been the ultimate stress test for NoorSigner today, and tomorrow I'll try to improve NoorSigner and apply these lessons to all the other platform versions too.