Welcome! What took you so long?
“Go and check Encarta….” nostr:npub1az9xj85cmxv8e9j9y80lvqp97crsqdu2fpu3srwthd99qfu9qsgstam8y8 😂 😎- that one word, immediately took me back 25 years.
One of the greats….. Taylor Steeles movies exposed so many great punk bands to the masses.
The French just do it right. Two interpretations of the humble chicken nugget….
🇫🇷 v 🇦🇺

Integrating #Bitcoin into Real Estate Development Financing:
Inflation severely devalues fiat currencies and erodes purchasing power. Initially, this scenario benefits the real estate sector as people invest in properties to outperform inflation, thus increasing its nominal value. Besides, inflation decreases the real cost of debt incurred to develop or purchase real estate over time, temporarily benefiting property owners.
However, in the long term, inflation negatively affects the real estate industry due to soaring construction and maintenance costs, and the diminishing value of income generated from properties. This dual impact underscores the need for an alternative strategy, such as incorporating bitcoin into credit products to hedge against the negative consequences of inflation.
My proposition is to integrate the purchase of bitcoin into real estate development financing. Allocating a portion of a loan, say 10%, to purchase bitcoin allows real estate developers to build a healthy capital base through the appreciation of bitcoin, which can be leveraged to fund maintenance, further construction, buying bitcoin or other development endeavors.
By integrating the purchase of bitcoin as part of a credit line, particularly in the inherently debt-intensive real estate sector, developers can enhance their financial resilience. This setup provides a robust financial strategy that enhances the company’s ability to navigate economic uncertainties and capitalize on the long-term appreciation of bitcoin.
It also allows developers to to hedge against the risk of real estate losing its status as humanity's primary store of value. Bitcoin offers a near-perfect digital alternative that is easier to access and cheaper to store and maintain. This strategy prepares real estate developers for a potential shift towards a Bitcoin standard, where real estate may no longer dominate, while reaping the benefits of both asset classes: real estate's cash flow and bitcoin's price appreciation. This approach can enable the private sector to become more independent of the state and thrive even amidst harsh inflationary conditions.
If you want to know what a Bitcoin-enriched #realestate loan could look like, check out my more detailed example here: https://leonwankum.substack.com/p/bitcoins-role-as-collateral-in-real
This makes sense. Bootstrap homeowners into a Bitcoin position, along with the lender and all participate in the appreciation.
“You can’t live in a Bitcoin” - maybe now you can? 🤔
Love this - ready to buy coffee immediately ☕️ ❤️ ✅
What model is your modem and router? Sounds like you haven’t assigned the IPv6 to the WAN interface? Brand/models of your gear will help troubleshoot. :)
Right. So IPv6 is not yet widely supported, it’s been 25 years coming and STILL we use IPv4, so perhaps to keep things simple, remove/disable IPv6 support for now.
Order of operation;
1) Confirm connection to your ISP on the modem using your PPPoE credentials (username & password). LED lights confining the link.
2) Connect wired and wifi clients to the modem, confirm they both work with DHCP assignment from the modem. Manually set DNS on modem to 1.1.1.1 and 8.8.8.8. You have a link to the internet that is working.
Assuming the above works, next step is to remove the double NAT problem between your modem and router. Few ways to do this, but will try to keep it simple.
3) Check the default IP range used on the DHCP for the modem and your router. Usually this will be 192.168.1.1 and may be the same for both devices. If so this is a problem.
4) Change the DHCP range on one of the devices. Use 10.0.0.1 as the alternative IP address for your router, leave the modem on 192.168.1.1. This solves the double NAT issue.
5) Connect the routers WAN port into a LAN port of the modem. Remember your router is needing a link to the outside hence “WAN” but your modem sees your router as just another client hence “LAN”.
6) Plug a wired client into the router. Can you ping the IP of the router? Can you ping the IP of the modem? Can you ping 1.1.1.1? If so your on the Internet.
Happy to help further if you need it - our time zones look about 12hrs different. 😎✅
This is pretty radical….. nostr:note1hkavmk89qnuy9vlgflzv0haldmmwellayu549gtdeujrfccjx7psdwm2vn
Typically you’d have the VLAN tag set on the modem (assuming the ISP specified this) the router is on the “LAN” so I’d check that first.
Setting DNS on both modem/router to 1.1.1.1 and 8.8.8.8 will rule out any DNS issues.
Finally is the modem set to bridge mode? Can you connect a wired client to the Internet directly into the modem? ping and traceroute are your friend in this situation.
✅😎
Bank wires still $30-$50 depending on geographic location…..$1 to settle with bitcoin is a bargain.
Give me stock…… in pink. 😎
#futureclassic
Toyota Prius, the first mass production EV on the market…….. is this the modern day model T, one to stick on 🧊 nostr:npub13qzhff64cf2hxx0df94ja0s7ckph3uruxmrfhxawmppd57v0quaq8tvwfd nostr:npub1sg6plzptd64u62a878hep2kev88swjh3tw00gjsfl8f237lmu63q0uf63m
#futureclassic #toyota

Truer words have never been spoken.
Every asset has a correlation of 1 in this situation…….The thinking starts later.






