Laeserin @Laeserin - 8mo
Project Alexandria is going to have the most wide applicability, but GitRepublic will be our most beautiful AI baby. We're programming our own C/C++ NDK (Aedile) and encryption libraries (noscrypt), just to have the right foundation to build it upon.
FYI for the people who think we at nostr:npub1s3ht77dq4zqnya8vjun5jp3p44pr794ru36d0ltxu65chljw8xjqd975wz haven't released anything, yet. We've been publishing low-level libraries and utilities. #Alexandria is our first client and it's being built with a popular NDK, so it's basically a side-project we needed to visualize the new event kinds and work out the kinks in the spec. #GitRepublic will be built upon Aedile. nostr:nevent1qvzqqqqqqypzphtxf40yq9jr82xdd8cqtts5szqyx5tcndvaukhsvfmduetr85ceqydhwumn8ghj7argv4nx7un9wd6zumn0wd68yvfwvdhk6tcpr3mhxue69uhhg6r9vd5hgctyv4kzumn0wd68yvfwvdhk6tcqyr6uwlx3knyfjf60g7qp8dl2ylhg4nswfjm6k40u50v29rckap34kkgpe0g
Follow nostr:npub1s3ht77dq4zqnya8vjun5jp3p44pr794ru36d0ltxu65chljw8xjqd975wz . We announce them there. And we are some of the most avid users of Nostr Wikis and GitWorkshop.dev.
It's been very interesting using other people's NDKs. We're learning.
We're an extremely architecture-focused team, so we're not just pumping out features. That's a hard sell on here, I know. We know that watching us think out loud about data design, relay mirroring, input validation and dockerizing servers is about as exciting as watching paint dry, but Nostr needs boring devs, too.
It's sort of a weird project because it moves really slowly and we spend a lot of time helping other people with their projects and debating the Nostr protocol and landscape, instead of just fiddling off alone in a corner. Watching us work probably doesn't make any sense. I think about that, a lot. We're a fun team to follow because we're full of talented writers, but it's like
liminal @liminal - 8mo
Yes, Alexandria is a Knowledge Base & reading app. The web version for interacting with knowledge, consuming and producing - enough of a justification for the kind & structure we are using. But there are so many more ways to interact with varying use cases, that's where it gets really interesting and wild.