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“In the pursuit of Truth to contribute to the evolution and upgrade the world”

“Solving a problem, worthwhile, will solve your problem. Solving your problem(solely), will solve your problem but will likely create a bigger problem for the global(society).”

Was running a marathon this morning, around 8km.

Will be running a reading marathon for the next 4 days(complete 2 books) — in a kind of 4 days vacation mode now.

“It’s really hard to make things simple” — Balaji Srinivasan

“If you haven’t studied something in depth , your mental model of it often implicitly reduces it to a few scenes from a Hollywood movie.” — Balaji Srinivasan

#bitcoin #thinkhard

The part of the code in question, in other words “the light 💡 itself “.

As he said, “someone has broke the code …” hahaha 😂. Far far from that, just getting started in learning about bitcoin (technically).

nostr:nevent1qqspy75wqpkt43vq0rskkafw3q4ldr8a45wqvphejhdsmpg0kdslzlgzyzhr0cwwmcw0q8zrwk98fs35ptykmz6eutl76jqjl0v90fvt7fpa2qcyqqqqqqgpp4mhxue69uhkummn9ekx7mqqjfu9f

Shared a screenshot of bitcoin code base (chainparams.c) showing the supply limit capped at 2.1x10^15 satoshis and adding that it’s not just talk, it’s actually real. The crypto traders on Binance congratulating me for “we were living in dark, someone has shown us the light 💡”… I actually liked that part. People need education on this, and technical people should be talking more to normies.

It was my first time as well to see it written in code, as I am about to run a local bitcoin node, currently exploring the code base. Very excited for it.

This is very important for everyday people to engage with legit technical people on the subject matter. As a short story, I first discovered Bitcoin in 2020, studied it (not fully) in 2021… I learned about PoW, block rewards, 21M etc., but those didn’t tell me anything really special at that time(I was in 2nd year of EE)… It’s actually when bitcoin hits 100k beginning this year, I said wait a minute, what’s going on here? And then I started to really learn about the core principles, the vision, and everything else about bitcoin under the curtains… I have been fascinated so far and continue to be.

Where I currently live not many people know about Bitcoin, if they do it’s just about the price movement and the headlines on the news.

I am currently thinking about the right strategy to start evangelizing about bitcoin (writing, meetup, YouTube…)

Very excited for what’s coming ahead :)

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

GM.

Some people say that everything is good for Bitcoin. I almost, but not quite, agree.

Everything that fails to land a critical hit, is good for Bitcoin. What doesn't kill it, usually makes it stronger. The bigger and more robust it gets, the more resilient it is against even the idea of a critical hit, and that has required work. When threats materialize, programmers program, financiers finance, and podcasters podcast.

Bitcoin is a growing, robust ecosystem that responds to threats and hardens against them. Sometimes at the base layer, often at higher layers. It doesn't put too many premature resources against threats that aren't currently hurting it, but can swarm massive resources in response to something that does start to hurt it. Nobody's in control; it's a well-designed swarm of incentives trending toward life, and in this case life means functional operation as a permissionless and high-quality global ledger to store and transmit value (i.e. electronic cash).

I've long since viewed it in that self-healing way, since it's a similar lens to how I view the established macroeconomic system as well. People continually underestimate a lindy system's response functions against threats, for both good systems (like Bitcoin) and bad systems (like central banking). It took me a bit of time to be convinced that Bitcoin was lindy, but once I did, I haven't seen any reason to waver.

Bears doubt its robustness. Bulls consider it highly robust. I'm a bull. It's not that I consider it invincible though; it's that I consider it as having a high probability shot at resisting forces against it, and a better shot than any of its competitors.

And for those who don't know, my background is in electronics engineering with a control systems focus in my early engineering career, so the fact that I became enamored with the robustness of a decentralized money's inbuilt control system and the ecosystem surrounding it was no small hurdle. It probably contributed to my skepticism early on, but once my skepticism was satisfied, it instead contributed to my conviction.

I agree with those who say that one day state attacks will be the biggest threats against Bitcoiners. Not against Bitcoin's existence itself, most likely, but against its permissionless and private usage.

The defense against that comes from those writing high quality code that gives people tools to resist, educators and financiers that help expand them, as well as jurisdictional arbitrage as high-conviction people can and do move around between legal jurisdictions toward freer ones.

It'll be a longer process than many expect, I think. But the ecosystem is built for it, and attracts the best people to deal with it. And Nostr is currently part of its epicenter.

That’s robustness, is actually antifragility, from Taleb

Making effort to cook for myself and eat bio as often as possible

The green dot in there around (-7 , 12). That’s kind of fun :)