Does anyone have any UX design articles/books/courses they could recommend? I'm working on an open source project ( #willow), and second to functionality, I want to ensure it has a really pleasant and intuitive UX story :bunthink:
> #Nostr appears to be quite similar to #Willow at a cursory glance. Willow peers store and exchange sets of Entries, Nostr peers store and exchange sets of events. Every Entry has a timestamp, every event has a created_at time. Every Entry belongs to a single subspace, every event belongs to a single pubkey. Willow organises Entries by their paths, Nostr organises events by their tags. https://willowprotocol.org/more/compare/index.html#compare_nostr
I wanted to make sure I did this part right, so I hired a very good and extremely experienced friend of mine to teach me about migrations. He used a project he's currently developing in private as an example and gave me permission to use it in my source code (properly attributed to him ofc). If you need any help with projects in at least Go, maybe reach out to him for a consultation :neofox: https://github.com/whereswaldon/
#Willow will always be free software, but it's hard to anticipate the future. I may want to switch to a different Free (FSF-approved) and Open Source (OSI-approved) licence in the future. To allow this relicensing within those FOSS limits and without requiring me to contact every historical contributor for their consent at the time of re-license, I'm going to ask contributors to sign a Fiduciary Licence Agreement, or an FLA. It's sort of like giving me advance consent to license your work under a different free and open source licence should that become necessary in the future.
The FLA was originally created by the FSFE. KDE has required its contributors to sign their FLA since 2008; theirs transfers contributor copyrights to the FSFE, so at any time, the FSFE can work with KDE to relicense any contribution to something more appropriate, but still within those FOSS limits.
Experimenting with form! This #basket is based on an oval in a circle. Golden #willow and #dogwood osier twigs weave together to make a useful carrier. #wildcrafted#handmade
ConocoPhillips' seismic application, which was submitted to the #Biden administration, requests testing across more than 270,000 acres of the Arctic. It would involve months of dragging heavy thumper trucks and other machinery across a fragile #ecosystem.
If approved, seismic blasting would threaten #PolarBears, #caribou herds, and other #wildlife that call the Arctic home. That's why we're calling on the #DepartmentOfTheInterior to reject any and all seismic activity on Arctic lands.
The #Willow Project is already a bad idea for our #environment. Proposed seismic blasting will make it even worse.
Seismic blasting helps #FossilFuel companies look for more oil and gas --