In case anyone is curious, I just checked the Wavlake RSS fe...

𝕳𝖊𝖓𝖗𝖎𝐤 𝕱𝖑𝐲𝖒𝖆𝖓

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hex

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nevent

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Kind-1 (TextNote)

2026-01-19T17:54:08Z

↳ 回复 sunamiold (npub1vpf582eklpnh5rf47l3c0ynmmtl53z5jk0tj07e2g08h49tner2qhu2z8c)

1) Creating track actually publishes it (we've just updated button names so it make more sense). Then you need to assemble your release from publishe...

In case anyone is curious, I just checked the Wavlake RSS feed for one of my releases and it seems the original 16-bit/44.1 kHz WAV file was automatically converted to a 191 kbps MP3. That is a bit on the low side, I would say, but it was reassuring to see I have not been unintentionally pushing out WAV files.

It is a good reminder of the importance of knowing both what you upload and what is actually delivered. If I had uploaded a 256 kbps MP3 to Wavlake and ended up with a 191 kbps MP3, the original audio would have been compressed twice, which probably would not have been ideal. In this case, it was fortunate that I provided the WAV file.

On the other hand, for a platform like Sunami, as you explained, I would much rather upload a 256 kbps MP3, or even 320 kbps, since I am responsible for the conversion myself. This avoids pushing very large files to the RSS players.

原始 JSON

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  "pubkey": "9c73236f565eb90bd4681c29ebb2d9c1b80e4e184cdbf84d6da742e990670cb6",
  "created_at": 1768845248,
  "tags": [
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      "wss://eden.nostr.land",
      "mention"
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    [
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    [
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      "wss://relay.primal.net/"
    ],
    [
      "r",
      "wss://relaypag.es/"
    ],
    [
      "r",
      "wss://relay.snort.social/"
    ]
  ],
  "content": "In case anyone is curious, I just checked the Wavlake RSS feed for one of my releases and it seems the original 16-bit/44.1 kHz WAV file was automatically converted to a 191 kbps MP3. That is a bit on the low side, I would say, but it was reassuring to see I have not been unintentionally pushing out WAV files.\n\nIt is a good reminder of the importance of knowing both what you upload and what is actually delivered. If I had uploaded a 256 kbps MP3 to Wavlake and ended up with a 191 kbps MP3, the original audio would have been compressed twice, which probably would not have been ideal. In this case, it was fortunate that I provided the WAV file.\n\nOn the other hand, for a platform like Sunami, as you explained, I would much rather upload a 256 kbps MP3, or even 320 kbps, since I am responsible for the conversion myself. This avoids pushing very large files to the RSS players.",
  "sig": "1e164947e801c6655712c74b5042623c1f116202e363813fdf9bb57816606414c7962b381d6615bd6ebf3c1403fe0016fc3b9811e0012321a23878bc0b7e27a9"
}