Did you know we offer Free Writing Feedback? 💖 Our resident writing coach, Annie Hayter, gives weekly personalised feedback on your writing! All you have to do is:
1) Post a piece of writing on any t2 Territory.
2) Comment "Open for feedback" with the link to your post under this prompt: <app.t2.world/prompt/-get-your-writing-checked-by-an-expert-for-free-week-30-cm3mwmo2j1207920mc19f3tb9g>
3) You'll be notified (by email or in-app, depending on your settings) when Annie leaves you feedback as a comment!
S 👀N
ft @alimo and まちじよさん and ice cold crisp refreshing hokkaido’s very own sapporo classic
crossed $1m in primary sales in 2024 between blueprint and mint podcast. 🫡
thank you to the 94k collectors that made this possible!
When we participate in a competition for monetary rewards, whether it’s a contest, applying for a grant, or even trading memecoins, we often feel upset when we don’t win. And that’s completely natural; for most of us, the primary purpose of competing is to achieve that win
The problem arises when the disappointment of not reaching our goal drains us, impacting not just the present but future chapters of our story as well
This is why the purpose should never solely be about winning. Instead, it should focus on the process. When we shift our perspective this way, we realize that even in losing, we are actually gaining. Admittedly, making this shift is challenging, but it’s worth the effort
Every competition is an experience, a chance to learn and grow. While monetary prizes are valuable, and often essential, they are not everything. Sometimes, the intangible rewards, such as personal growth, resilience, and self-awareness, hold far greater long-term value
Today, you might have lost the opportunity to win X but by reflecting on your journey and understanding why things didn’t go as planned, you can approach future opportunities differently, and potentially win XXXX tomorrow
Each loss is a step forward if we choose to see it that way. To adopt this mindset, we need to approach competitions with the understanding that the true purpose lies in the process, not just the final destination🌹
With Lens V3, we introduced the concept of Graphs, allowing developers to create their own graphs in addition to the canonical graph.
Users can seamlessly connect to these custom graphs using their portable Accounts. Graphs also support Rules, enabling token-gating.
I ate 2 slices of cake & 4 cookies this past Saturday at my sons party that had to be a collective 2,000 calories.
Regardless, I gained no weight in the past week because I have averaged 1786 calories, 145 grams of protein, 76 fats & 72 carbs per day.
Still on track to be at 200 lbs before we go on our cruise next year.
Waiting on the post about algorithm markets👀🙃
it’s great to see so much discussion about likes and stickers just four weeks after launching orb v3. it shows how much you all care about the product.
there are two main concerns right now: first, reacting to posts is too hard bc it takes multiple taps, and second, not everyone wanna buy the stickers, especially for new users.
we’re listening to your feedback and making changes. soon, we’ll simplify the reacting process and update our onboarding to include some free sticker packs for users.
once these updates are in place, i think you won’t miss the old like button. but we’ll keep listening to feedback and making improvements. 🫡