This idea is great! Furthermore I feel it illustrates the power of what I will call:
Fractal Architecting
Which I suppose can be defined as something like,
“Designing systems with the goal of nurturing self-similarity up and down the layers of a system.”
I take your idea to be an example of this because one thing that I (the user) like about operating on the BSV protocol is the ownership and control I have over the experience. Based on the conversations I’ve seen in here, this sense of ownership is a selling point for many of us.
Your solution to the management of channel display (public or private) rejects the premise entirely and offers a third way that, to my eyes, resembles core aspects of the BSV protocol itself. Namely more control, choice, and a fundamental ownership of the experience. Something that is not often found on the internet today.
As we come to understand more and more of the nuances present in the base layer (the BSV protocol) we can then work to cultivate this self-similarity in more and more areas, both big and small, as we build out and find ourselves needing to make design choices.
What’s more, understanding this phenomenon can then help us learn to “break the rules” where we find appropriate... imbuing the things we build with character and unique flavor.
The BSV protocol is pro-choice (no, not in that way, hah) and there might be a certain elegance that emerges from its apps, settings, and even users themselves being pro-choice too.
[holds after the inhale] “It’s just choices all the way down man.”
Thanks for your contribution. I love it.
This idea is great! Furthermore I feel it illustrates the power of what I will call:
Fractal Architecting
Which I suppose can be defined as something like,
“Designing systems with the goal of nurturing self-similarity up and down the layers of a system.”
I take your idea to be an example of this because one thing that I (the user) like about operating on the BSV protocol is the ownership and control I have over the experience. Based on the conversations I’ve seen in here, this sense of ownership is a selling point for many of us.
Your solution to the management of channel display (public or private) rejects the premise entirely and offers a third way that, to my eyes, resembles core aspects of the BSV protocol itself. Namely more control, choice, and a fundamental ownership of the experience. Something that is not often found on the internet today.
As we come to understand more and more of the nuances present in the base layer (the BSV protocol) we can then work to cultivate this self-similarity in more and more areas, both big and small, as we build out and find ourselves needing to make design choices.
What’s more, understanding this phenomenon can then help us learn to “break the rules” where we find appropriate... imbuing the things we build with character and unique flavor.
The BSV protocol is pro-choice (no, not in that way, hah) and there might be a certain elegance that emerges from its apps, settings, and even users themselves being pro-choice too.
[holds after the inhale] “It’s just choices all the way down man.”
Thanks for your contribution. I love it.