This is the reason I initially got on the waitlist to join Bluesky.
11 years ago I made a social media aggregator where users had to have a verified domain to join - think using your domain as username and using you domain to authenticate your social media profiles. My show HN: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6529523
This probably sounds silly but in the end I didn’t actually use Bluesky because they don’t support emoji domains.
Did you try using the emoji domain as-is, or did you use the punycode version? e.g. <US flag>.com vs xn--w77hd.com
Because I can imagine them not implementing support to limit lookalike codepoints being used in handles, or they just hadn't gotten around to supporting punycode in their domain verifier.
I attempted both the emoji character and punycode.
Emojis are tricky, most domain registrars can’t get them right, most browsers can’t get at least some right (usually the ones with ZWJ characters.
So by no means a knock on Bluesky, but I was waiting for an invite code for so long just to be able to use an emoji as my identity.
Not directed at you, but not sure why my initial comment was downvoted, it’s pretty damn hard for new social media platforms to get users from other platforms - and as domain identity/usernames is a main competitive feature and I was super excited then didn’t end up using it, sharing my experience might be worth more than downvoting
I jumped on Bluesky, Mastodon and Threads during earlier exodi. They all waned for various reasons (Mastodon was slow and unreliable, Threads was basically an Instagram feed of nothingness, and Bluesky was dead at the time).
This wave does feel very different though. People joining in large numbers (I gained more followers in a day than in a year on Mastodon). The Bluesky app itself is actually very nice. Twitter is becoming more and more unbearable with the force-feeding of ads and totally broken search (that's without even mentioning the post-election environment).
You might be right, but I do feel like this time is different. Let's check back in 12 months and see.
@nickfisherau.bsky.social if anyone wants to say hello.
I wonder if instead of black+repeating images (assumption here is that's the display and not an artifact of the firehose, the same unique image often repeats a lot in the same short instance) it'd be cleaner to have some sort of exponential backoff queue (the closer it is to empty the slower it empties like 0.5s/numInQueue, last element in queue will wait no less than 0.5s but also wait for the next element to queue). This would make the flow a bit more consistent, never blank, and never repeating.
Is there any way to make it flash less? I'm not epileptic, and I appreciate that you put a warning first, but it's still highly unpleasant after around 2 seconds. If I could look at it for a bit long it would be a cool experiment.
I have an important account on Twitter where I publish manually posts, thoughts, links, announcement, etc. I tried to look for a way to crosspost to Threads and Bluesky automatically, but I couldn't find anything. Any suggestions?
decentralized social media is the achilles heel of democrats. they just keep throwing themselves at it and it never works and never will work. while democrats work feverishly on this concept, X continues to grow daily. i would put money on this if polymarket hadnt just been the victim of a politically motivated FBI raid…
I was consuming the full authenticated firehose (not jetstream) with tens of megabytes of RAM with python+sqlite (unfortunately I ran out of bandwidth on my cheapo VPS, I've yet to refactor to use jetstream instead)
I dont understand why I would build on bluesky when it seems like it would have the same medium term issues that the twitter api had anyway, but enjoy it while it lasts I guess.
Are there efforts to build a similar type of network which rewards running a public relay? I'm not sure how, for instance, Mastodon solves this problem
In Activity Pub each node is essentially the full stack of what ATProto breaks up into individual entities. This means that each node in the fediverse is incented to connect to other nodes in the network, to provide good coverage to their users.
I mean, the punch line of this post is that the "firehose" of even a successful social network is trivial to handle. Even Twitter at its pinnacle of popularity barely breached ~10000 posts/second intraday peaks. If you only want to observe and transiently store such traffic you barely even need a computer.
1. Your username can be your website. I'm @bradgessler.com.
2. Copy and pasting images into a message works on iOS (this has been broken on X/Twitter for a long time).
There's more reasons to like it, but these two feel pretty great.
I put a Ruby hacker starter pack together if you're looking for a way in:
https://go.bsky.app/HXB2cPh
There's tons of other ones and communities as well.
But more importantly, you have to verify that you own the domain. I can't sign up as google.com
https://chaos.social/@jonty/110307532009155432
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35820815
11 years ago I made a social media aggregator where users had to have a verified domain to join - think using your domain as username and using you domain to authenticate your social media profiles. My show HN: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6529523
This probably sounds silly but in the end I didn’t actually use Bluesky because they don’t support emoji domains.
Because I can imagine them not implementing support to limit lookalike codepoints being used in handles, or they just hadn't gotten around to supporting punycode in their domain verifier.
Emojis are tricky, most domain registrars can’t get them right, most browsers can’t get at least some right (usually the ones with ZWJ characters.
So by no means a knock on Bluesky, but I was waiting for an invite code for so long just to be able to use an emoji as my identity.
Not directed at you, but not sure why my initial comment was downvoted, it’s pretty damn hard for new social media platforms to get users from other platforms - and as domain identity/usernames is a main competitive feature and I was super excited then didn’t end up using it, sharing my experience might be worth more than downvoting
This wave does feel very different though. People joining in large numbers (I gained more followers in a day than in a year on Mastodon). The Bluesky app itself is actually very nice. Twitter is becoming more and more unbearable with the force-feeding of ads and totally broken search (that's without even mentioning the post-election environment).
You might be right, but I do feel like this time is different. Let's check back in 12 months and see.
@nickfisherau.bsky.social if anyone wants to say hello.
Time will tell—ultimately it’s a self-fulfilling prophecy. If people “believe” and sign up, it will happen.
I wrote a contest winning bot back at one tie:
https://theexceptioncatcher.com/blog/2015/11/how-i-got-my-bo...
I used it last weekend to throw together this very silly little thing: https://bigmood.blue/
I wonder if instead of black+repeating images (assumption here is that's the display and not an artifact of the firehose, the same unique image often repeats a lot in the same short instance) it'd be cleaner to have some sort of exponential backoff queue (the closer it is to empty the slower it empties like 0.5s/numInQueue, last element in queue will wait no less than 0.5s but also wait for the next element to queue). This would make the flow a bit more consistent, never blank, and never repeating.
Also if images kept their aspect ratio.
Would be good if it just tiled the images, and then wrapped around after the screen is filled
I wonder if they (or some third party) offers zip files of dumps of various kinds? It seems that would go easier on thier servers.
Stark contrast to the stupid locked-down new API rules twitter rolled out post-Elon.
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/moscow-uses-facial-reco...
That's as much as my car loan... No normal individual can justify that.
> It's fun to play with data[citation needed]
Independent relays can exist, which is better than the fully centralized options.
There is no financial incentive to bear the cost of running a public relay.
Are there efforts to build a similar type of network which rewards running a public relay? I'm not sure how, for instance, Mastodon solves this problem
In Activity Pub each node is essentially the full stack of what ATProto breaks up into individual entities. This means that each node in the fediverse is incented to connect to other nodes in the network, to provide good coverage to their users.