Event JSON
{
"id": "89e2ad93d00d72518868806dcd660f86f90c67d6975a4ea702d18c2771508763",
"pubkey": "af7770ff56eb1e8b8e36c1a169d077254a173b86ecf90d9fdf8acb1ea3ab1f69",
"created_at": 1685592824,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"74178bce7d582f9af3a53c79784fd67efec37c6df9e6997f2d40f5917af8085b",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"p",
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[
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"b19aece8a2e9c1a7fc4d984a1494118aee6141f14ac2f7f6828d9abf9b96b227",
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[
"mostr",
"https://fosstodon.org/users/dschier/statuses/110467011364221990"
]
],
"content": "nostr:npub1wstchnnatqhe4ua983uhsn7k0mlvxlrdl8nfjledgr6ez7hcppdspcez75 there is a common misconception: Stability has nothing to do with support of recent drivers, bugs or crashes.\n\nIf a software is considered stable, it indicates one thing only: No breaking changes to be expected. That’s it. You can have an unreliable, full-of-bugs, constantly crashing software, which can be stable, if the API/ABI does not change.\n\nWhat users often consider as stable is: reliable, solid, resilient.\n\nJust my 2 pence.",
"sig": "6f465a3f80ca16b14e60e6a34468defbf36e6afb27730e9a80aa2ae59feb731af17143cd9496af7d1d55c439169baf51e24031ec2bd6b22f81dabe642c406d0b"
}