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Building my own kingdom. Powered by the sun, detached from the system. A decade off-grid. Freedom is non-negotiable. Bitcoin is the weapon. Enduring the collapse with a smile.

Played in some hot springs up in Idaho-land today.

Think they were called Warwick hot springs. Hot. 55 outside. Vibey'. If you go make sure you drop by The Lil Smokey Bar up there in the middle of nowhere in a mountain. You'll be over a mile above sea level. Super chillaxed place.

Now I'm contemplating buying an expedition vehicle. Don't ask.

🙌🏿

Replying to Avatar mcshane

gn

Tis the season. Fired mine up last week

Been a lil slammed recently, but what's up NOstr!

Slow work break!

That's about as accurate as the speed at which our government works.

I have to say Kamala Harris and Tim Walzzz reminds me of that movie Multiplicity back in the day where at one point the clones clone a clone and outcomes a tard. Our VP's VP is a lil bit of a derrrrp shoot

Grateful to have switched to a Google pixel 9 and graphene OS

No longer a sheep

Replying to Avatar Casey R

Why Quantum computing won't be a threat to #bitcoin any time soon:

First, some basic things to understand...

Quantum computers are computers that operate on the principles of quantum mechanics, which states that the properties of particles (e.g., spin) are described as existing in a superposition of states (i.e., there is no fixed state) until measured, at which point a definite state is observed.

Classical computers use transistors that can be in one of two states (0 or 1). These are controlled via logic gates. However, quantum computers are based on "qubits" (quantum bits) which can exist in a superposition (i.e., a linear combination of 0 and 1).

The probability that a qubit will "collapse" to either 0 or 1 once measured is related to the amplitude for that particular quantum state. Thus the workings of a quantum computer involve manipulating these amplitudes through quantum gates.

Now, quantum computers do not work by processing multiple solutions at the same time and then automatically outputting the correct answer.

Instead, quantum algorithms are designed to manipulate the amplitudes of various possible states through interference, enhancing the probability of correct solutions and canceling out incorrect ones. This process increases the likelihood that, when you measure the system, you get a useful answer!

This is where things get troublesome...

Today's largest quantum computer (from IBM) has 1,000 qubits. But the number of amplitudes grows by 2^n where n = the number of qubits. Thus there are 2^1000 amplitudes (i.e., parameters) to manipulate. That's more than the number of atoms in the observable universe!!

Okay, say they somehow manage to figure out how to manipulate that many parameters in an efficient way, the real question is, how many qubits would you need to crack modern cryptography? Such as that used in #bitcoin?

You would need millions of qubits...

That means having the ability to precisely control and manipulate more than 2^1000000 parameters, an absolutely astronomically large number. Good luck!

Perhaps it could be achieved one day, perhaps it never will. We don't know. But the point is, bitcoin is perfectly safe, and will be for some time!

#quantumcomputers #bitcoin #quantum #cryptography

🤤🤤🤤🤤 keep talking

Careful, some of that water's been turning the frogs gay 🤣

I consume a massive Costco bag every two weeks

you should be able to do whatever the fuck you want so long as it does not physically hurt another person or animal or have a huge negative affect on the environment.