Event JSON
{
"id": "b1edb95c6c61a14a5bd74d19aca151f676554d0308955a1eed255d4ddda0d3f4",
"pubkey": "8dcaddef9bcd49aef188278045d019c3cb913bdc28c26508b55e23b90e477102",
"created_at": 1729990550,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"2b4a17d79532490690aa4930e2d7d21e3b13332a44e1de1210b8b2e333623b77",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"p",
"0ecc4e999a6ece69b4a5c1de90118b96e1b0e8e863d5a5b489810557bdeb5d9f",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"e",
"00596e09ed3cd5085e933101317a950fd9b8a880f11ffcdd76d5c098026e204b",
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],
[
"proxy",
"https://social.seattle.wa.us/users/trigonella/statuses/113376660744328123",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "nostr:npub19d9p04u4xfysdy92fycw947jrca3xve2gnsauysshzewxvmz8dms6kf02p Meanwhile, our ears also don't hear loud and soft sounds at the same time. But in this case, our ears *can't* scan the same sound again to focus on a different part because time has already moved on and that sound is no longer available. So our ears adjust only once (for the loudest sound at any given moment) and skip softer sounds. Therefore, a single-pass audio recording is pretty much what our ears hear.",
"sig": "860e44f7c12de73a766efde5f77759c374a167b7c1281bd1407626b516223bd6ed6aa2d55042ceac60a669eb08ee00c4f9a291c53d9f873c38fbeeefb823bfbb"
}