Event JSON
{
"id": "2b45c1ba0b4070b13e3f288dc780c09708b58340908d79f6fdcabd077687de1e",
"pubkey": "f9c4b03e229b168eaa63ed06dd4ab01a8b6d297dde10899b3ba4c5fda538f98c",
"created_at": 1731824114,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"452248adf61acf9dc0e10c0a16c58381c9a028cd0c9ebf4c2db5d5b2c9496f36",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"p",
"47f54409a4620eb35208a3bc1b53555bf3d0656b246bf0471a93208e20672f6f",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"e",
"806955f42321d8c51232fa94c12931c41ee035c0189a4b03bbbd092158bb7976",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub",
"reply"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://mstdn.social/users/yth/statuses/113496825172212905",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "nostr:nprofile1qy2hwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnddaehgu3wwp6kyqpqg53y3t0krt8ems8pps9pd3vrs8y6q2xdpj0t7npdkh2m9j2fdumq0pavnq And to think how these times were made without proper music software. This was probably done straight into assembler code. I’ve done it too and it involves staring at 8-bit hex numbers which often contain packed information, changing them, assembling the code (which, in my memory, took up to 5 seconds) before you could hear what you had actually done. Yet a lot of amazing music was done that way!",
"sig": "118442d3ff981ad45a0d5237f8ebf9a73b1e1393139e337bdbcf7bd33a6e16b8c80949022c4830b0976795bfc9fecd40567cffb44ed7d89ad2e3e22d975a06fc"
}