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AI toolmaker | Co-founder @Gen8 | Drums Reminder to self: the natural state of the free market is deflationary.

There’s not much that makes me happier than a fridge filled with fresh steak straight from the farmer 🄳

#nosfit #foodstr

Voice notes with transcription would be a hard yes

One of the easiest ways to vote for a better system is to ask if someone accepts #bitcoin every time you buy something. Even if you know they don’t. They make their decision based on how many people ask - so we better start asking! #asknostr

Working on it! Now using olive oil and avocado oil still. How bad do you think this still is? Or is it messing around in the margins from here?

Out of curiosity, what do you use for steaks, fried eggs and minced meat?

Only an investment bubble, the tech isn’t bubbling. Klarna just rebuilt minimum versions of Workday and Salesforce using AI and canceled their contracts. Highly deflationary signs. Which doesn’t always result in investment returns but still is awesome for society 🄳

I would turn the knob just a bit further and consuming and using stuff from the better systems. The goal is not to have nothing but to have better things (systems)

Replying to Avatar walker

I was a unique case of homeschooling because I was homeschooled through 8th grade then went made the decision to go try high school because I was worried I might be stupid compared to other kids who I knew through sports, clubs, community, etc… My parents made it clear that it was my decision to make, so I made it.

Turns out I was not, in fact, stupid relative to the other kids… I was able to skip through math classes in high school and graduated valedictorian while being a three-sport athlete all four years. I discovered that public school is absurdly easy, because everything caters to the lowest common denominator. The focus was on time spent (in your desk, doing homework, etc) vs deliverables. Put another way, it was an ā€œhourlyā€ mentality instead of a ā€œsalaryā€ mentality.

That said, I had some really great science and math teachers in high school that I am still very grateful for. They were also the type of teachers who thought administrative mandates were bullshit and just wanted to focus on teaching.

Things I liked most about being homeschooled:

- I finished all my work in 2-3 hours in the morning and spent the rest of the day outside — I was outside constantly.

- I was done when I was done. There was no ā€œhomeworkā€ because it was all at home.

- I could do my work from anywhere, or work ahead a few days bitcoin if needed. There were no arbitrary constraints.

- It taught me to work on deliverables.

- I read a shitload.

- I was never uncomfortable around ā€œadults.ā€ They were just bigger people to me. I showed everyone respect, but I was perfectly comfortable and happy hanging out with adults even as the only kid (plus my sister).

- I got to do a bunch of random shit because I my schoolwork itself took very little time.

On the subject of random shit, one of my favorite memories is when my mom set me up with a legit blacksmith to apprentice for a day. He’s the first person who taught me about Fibonacci. Seriously brilliant and badass dude. Made a huge impression on me and I will never forget it.

I also just played in the woods constantly. Started fires, built forts, used knives and axes and guns from a young age.

In terms of things I disliked, the only real thing was the worry that I was not going to be as smart as my peers at public school. Benchmarking was hard. It’s the whole reason I decided to go to high school, only to find out that a lot of people are complete morons, with zero initiative, drive, or grit.

I also spend a day a week at a Montessori school for a year or two. That was neat. Zero ā€œschoolworkā€ was done. We just built shit and cooked shit and played outside.

My parents also helped found a small charter school (about 10 kids). We would get together once a week and had a couple tutors who came in. I had an awesome Mennonite algebra tutor named Edith. We got on swell.

Anyway, highly recommend homeschooling, and will be doing it with our kid(s). There are infinitely more online resources available now than there were when my parents did it.

Thank you for your story. It’s my biggest dream to give my children this opportunity. Will have to move countries to do this but I will

It would be some political tactics for the books. I don’t know where I stand on the copyright and llm debate. But it does look like there’s no way of not taking a five year delay, on getting llms to benefit us, if we heavily enforce copyrights. In a few years we will have infrastructure to share revenue over copyright income that can be accessed for llms. Hard problem though..

Hahaha peer reviewed šŸ˜‚

Its getting a lot better over time though.. plenty or useful things it can pick up that people waste their time on now

What is your point Fred? You found a query to ask AI that doesn’t work?

Replying to Avatar Sebastix

Who’s coming to Amsterdam? A day before the Bitcoin Amsterdam conference you can join nostr:npub1h5ewqujs336m0kdez46l03jttnaqp3yrvf7evertw0ec52q3qulq4kcdg7 (October 8, a whole day!) and during the conference we will host a Nostr booth!

https://geyser.fund/project/nostrboothbitcoinamsterdam/

#NostrDam #NostrBooth #btcamsterdam

nostr:note1l5ng75txwerpqtdks0m3dudukjjyslplydf94uh3rg9mt8fkmd8s3l6qrc

Where’s the activities for the 8th? I’d love to join