Content pfp
Content
@
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

borodutch pfp
borodutch
@warpcastadmin.eth
ok farcaster, let me introduce https://thefarcasterexperiment.com/ to you all basically, @dwr.eth claims that there were no breaking changes and only my stuff is broken or that neynar (cc @rish) had something broken well, let's test what @dwr.eth is saying. i launched a farcaster hub from ground up, then connected to it with official node js farcaster lib, then made @healthbot use this hub no third-party software. no me touching the backend, nodejs dependency or the hub let's see for how long this can last, i give it 2-3 months before there is a breaking change that makes me touch the code to make a thing as simple as publishing a cast every hour going again, all native farcaster hub stack, no extra dependencies, just something that "still works since the time it went permissionless" or whatever what are your bets? when will it break? this is a true stress-test of dev trust being broken or upheld
3 replies
0 recast
26 reactions

Dan Romero pfp
Dan Romero
@dwr.eth
We are moving to a new version of the protocol in January called snapchain. So it will likely break then. We're not a mature, at-scale protocol. Still actively being built. I understand that you're busy with your own startup that you don't have time to follow along with all the changes. But the vast majority of active developers on the protocol, when surveyed, voted for moving faster and focusing on user growth vs. moving slower and making sure everything is stable.
2 replies
0 recast
2 reactions

borodutch pfp
borodutch
@warpcastadmin.eth
coming back to the original topic, "how did farcaster break trust" this is how. this is my original feedback, there is no trust in whatever one builds surviving even 2-3 months without being touched and you're missing the larger set of devs that can spend some time (but not all their full-time work time) benefiting the ecosystem *most* of the things i remember using on farcaster (including 3rd party clients) from 2023 (or even early 2024) are not here today — and the most basic reason is the need to constantly support the software with never-ending breaking changes
2 replies
0 recast
1 reaction

Kt 🤠 pfp
Kt 🤠
@boredhead
lol. hence the point above is proved.
0 reply
0 recast
1 reaction