Thread

Here's a quick rundown of the onboarding process in the new NoorNote 0.4.0 desktop app: 1. New users start off on the welcome screen. image 2. A key pair gets generated automatically. But you can regenerate them as many times as you want. image 3. You're prompted to download a backup. But you can also optionally save it somewhere, like in a password manager. 4. It only moves on once you confirm the backup. image 5. Now you can import this key pair into the local key signer. image 6. You set your password for the trust session... image 7. ...then it continues after a success message. image 8. In the next screen, a few random usernames get generated. But of course, you can set your own. image 9. Then you can pick a profile picture or upload one yourself. image 10. And create a bio. image 11. Then the new user gets three random suggestions from the 15 largest relays. You can reroll them and even enter your own. But here's the thing: Even if the user picks some dumb relays, like really obscure ones, it barely affects how NoorNote works. Like when displaying users and notes that aren't on your own relays. That's thanks to the outbound relays principle. image 12. NIP-17 DMs need your own inbox relays. Hardly any newbie knows that. No big deal, it suggests four suitable ones, and the user should pick two. Over time, I could add more options there too. image 13. So the new user's timeline doesn't end up empty, it now suggests some thematically curated follow packs. 14. Once the user makes their selection, it moves on. image 15. Now all that's left is a Lightning wallet for zapping and getting zapped. The most common newbie mistake with new accounts is avoiding setting it up. That's understandable, who even helps with that at the start? image 16. After you sign up at Rizful and click "Open Rizful," you get a one-time code that you copy... image 17. ...and paste into the wizard. When you hit "Connect" after that, it fetches the NWC string and enters it into NoorNote. image 18. Finally, there's a little summary, and with "Save & Go to timeline," everything gets published to the relays, NoorNote loads the timeline as usual, and the user can jump right in. image In the web browser, the order in the wizard is a little different. It recommends installing Alby first, simply because it's the only browser extension that stores sensitive data encrypted right in the browser. That cuts down the attack surface from other malicious browser extensions, for example. And the Alby setup starts off with connecting a Lightning wallet anyway. That's why the Rizful step gets moved up, right after guiding the new user through the Alby installation. After that, the wizard steps are just like in the desktop version. image

Replies (7)

Here is a mistake that most beginners make on Nostr, in my experience, and one that most clients are not very helpful with: 1. Someone generates a new keypair. 2. The client they use for their onboarding process then suggests a few relays, which they accept. 3. They then write a bio, which is published on those relays. 4. Later, after a few weeks of using Nostr, they choose other relays, sometimes keeping only one or two of the original relays. 5. Since they don't really care about their bio, they don't republish it on the new relays. As a result, their profile is difficult for clients to access, and other users do not know "who is speaking" when they see their notes, until someone explains it to them. So, to avoid this, clients should simply republish the kind 0 on the new relays immediately when a new kind 10002 is published.