elsat on Nostr: One of nostr’s superpowers is “log in” with public key (npub). Most people ...
One of nostr’s superpowers is “log in” with public key (npub).
Most people lurk, and read. Orders magnitude fewer post.
This is natural.
Nostr app devs can take advantage by:
-allowing log in with npub
-defaulting new app loads/installs a logged in with e.g. dev’a npub (whilst displaying demo/read only mode).
-encouraging, making it apparent, and easy to view nostr through the lens e.g. Jack or other less known npubs
Most people lurk, and read. Orders magnitude fewer post.
This is natural.
Nostr app devs can take advantage by:
-allowing log in with npub
-defaulting new app loads/installs a logged in with e.g. dev’a npub (whilst displaying demo/read only mode).
-encouraging, making it apparent, and easy to view nostr through the lens e.g. Jack or other less known npubs
quoting note15a5…zwqsCounterintuitive wisdom from "Design for Community":
"Go to the front door of your site and start clicking. Take the most direct path to the post button—the button that a user would click to commit his post to your site. Count the clicks it takes to get from start to finish. The more clicks it takes, the better the posts will be."
We are so trained to "reduce friction" wherever possible. But the implicit tradeoff is toward quantity, rather than quality. The author also talks about leading users through existing content before they are prompted to contribute their own. This encourages people to internalize the community's culture before disrupting it with their own untempered perspective.