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Replying to Avatar Alex Gleason

I heard that Chinese symbols says more then english letters/words so its more effective for ai’s to use that when they communicate (with eachother)

Replying to Avatar Efrat Fenigson

✈️ Nomad diaries, note #2121

🗺️ 3 months, 6 countries, countless train rides — and a backpack full of lessons:

☑️ Books are heavy. Audible is fun.

☑️ Jeans weigh more than you think.

☑️ More undies (Aussie for underwear) = less stress over laundry.

☑️ Hair strainer is more effective than hair dryer - which exists in any hotel/airbnb.

☑️ You can buy whatever you need wherever you get to, so don’t stress about packing “everything I need”.

☑️ One pair of good walking shoes beats three “cute but blistery” pairs.

☑️ I’m a soft mattress kind of girl, 2 pillows minimum, 3 ideally.

☑️ Switzerland doesn’t have mosquitos so you can sleep with open windows

☑️ Google Maps’ “10 min walk” = 20 with luggage and cobblestones.

☑️ If the hotel says “city view,” it might mean “view of the neighboring building”

☑️ Traveling in the EU? Drop flights & annoying airports. Trains are more fun.

☑️ No ID/passport check on a train, no luggage weight limit.

☑️ Traveling with bitcoin is amazing.

☑️ Cities and merchants that accept bitcoin are more fun, and smarter.

☑️ Lightning payments works faster than most card machines (except in Lugano 😅)

☑️ “Do you take bitcoin?” is my new icebreaker in any language.

☑️ Bitcoin meetups abroad double as instant friendship machines.

☑️ Dual citizenship rocks.

💡What’s your best tip for travelling?

🛫 Looking forward to exploring 6 more countries in the next 3 months!

What do you mean with: ”Hair strainer is more effective than hair dryer ”?

The impatient want stability within the current system, the patient want to BE the new system.

Most people think Bitcoin volatility is bad. It’s actually the world’s greatest patience test—and most are failing it.

“His name was Sir William Osler. Here are the twenty-one words that he read in the spring of 1871—twenty-one words from Thomas Carlyle that helped him lead a life free from worry: ‘Our main business is not to see what lies dimly at a distance, but to do what lies clearly at hand.’” ​

— How to Stop Worrying and Start Living by Dale Carnegie​

Running Knots