The Lord is good. His mercies are new every morning. Great is his faithfulness!
Messy todo lists drain energy before the day even starts. We just published a guide that shows how to turn Maple AI into your own executive assistant—so capture, prioritize, and schedule happen in minutes, not hours.
And all your sensitive data is private by default.
https://blog.trymaple.ai/plan-your-day-like-a-pro-time-management-with-personal-ai/
Step 1 → Capture
Dump every task—work or personal—into Maple with the mic. No filtering needed; everything is end-to-end encrypted, so even client details stay private.
Step 2 → Prioritize
Maple scores each item with importance + urgency. One command and you get a ranked list that actually reflects real-world stakes.
(Eisenhower Matrix is used here, but you can choose your own.)
Step 3 → Schedule
Tell Maple your hours and it converts the list into productivity blocks of time, slots in breaks, and groups quick errands automatically. Adjust on the fly with plain-language tweaks.
(Pomodoro is used here, but you can use your own.)
The post ends with the exact prompt nostr:nprofile1qydhwumn8ghj7mnjv4kxz7fwvvkhxar9d3kxzu3wdejhgtcprpmhxue69uhhqun9d45h2mfwwpexjmtpdshxuet5qqsgafy9ye4j9p2x8vfmlq6equtpcg4m8ks7v545g0d3f7wwueeq5scz9g5a6 has refined over months—copy/paste it and Maple builds a fresh plan every morning.
Get the full prompt and read the post here. Share the post with friends who you want better AI prompts!
https://blog.trymaple.ai/plan-your-day-like-a-pro-time-management-with-personal-ai/
Team, what’s next on the roadmap after mobile app? Model selection, file upload?
I've found a Friend, oh, such a Friend!
He bled, he died to save me;
And not alone the gift of life,
But his own self he gave me.
Naught that I have my own I call,
I hold it for the Giver;
My heart, my strength, [my bitcoin], my life, my all,
Are his, and his forever.
nostr:nprofile1qqsvf646uxlreajhhsv9tms9u6w7nuzeedaqty38z69cpwyhv89ufcqpz3mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujuerpd46hxtnfduq3samnwvaz7tmjv4kxz7fwwdhx7un59eek7cmfv9kqfa3z5x Good MM episode! 58 mins. 👍
On the next one, can you speak to what Strike is doing to enhance account/app security? Seems more important now with the loan product launching.
As bitcoiners, we love freedom and self-sovereignty.
Saving in bitcoin will give you greater financial freedom, but without Christ, it’s hollow.
Christian freedom is paradoxical. One must give it up to find it. George Matheson’s hymn, Make Me a Captive, Lord (1890), captures it well:
Make me a captive, Lord,
And then I shall be free;
Force me to render up my sword,
And I shall conqu'ror be.
I sink in life's alarms
When by myself I stand;
Imprison me within Thine arms,
And strong shall be my hand.
My heart is weak and poor
Until it master find;
It has no spring of action sure,
It varies with the wind.
It cannot freely move
Till Thou hast wrought its chain;
Enslave it with Thy matchless love,
And deathless it shall reign.
My will is not my own
Till Thou hast made it Thine;
If it would reach a monarch's throne,
It must its crown resign.
It only stands unbent
Amid the clashing strife,
When on Thy bosom it has leant,
And found in Thee its life.
I bet Saylor owned the domain strategy.com for some time.
Read the first three chapters/meditations of your book nostr:npub1e07k2u4s97cwyyts8enfq465a2xjna4xxlpfpz7aaandhavnje5qp8w4rg. So far, it’s really good and strikes a good balance of appealing to bitcoiners and presenting the gospel. Thanks for writing it!
Nope. Still waiting.
nostr:npub14f0xen78ed7rgvw39v82fwp7tv65yasz2gsgpf4gvxy4q5nlsydsk37k3l is TGFB a registered non profit?
Hey all, looking for a platform to express God’s will through music.
#introductions https://video.nostr.build/5ecaca9f597433459e0a4fcc6f11faba948ac66f8940c3958dcdc3a917416165.mp4
Welcome Bob!
GM. I love Sundays because it's a day to gather together to worship the Lord and hear God's word proclaimed.
It's a day that I am most clearly reminded of who I am in Christ, and it grounds me for the week ahead.
I hope you will worship the Lord today.
GM, friends. Don’t forget to practice good opsec, including on Nostr.
Yes. I’m a steward. But I need to remind myself often.
Admittedly, I really enjoyed this timely discussion with nostr:npub16le69k9hwapnjfhz89wnzkvf96z8n6r34qqwgq0sglas3tgh7v4sp9ffxj.
Danny asks great questions, with intelligent follow-up points for clarification… and does both with a chill vibe.
The What Bitcoin Did podcast is in great hands! ⚡️
nostr:note1sqrexav054xtjdr88apv9wquxqsns47h4c4k3l5yej9q556zwcuqlza5nw
Jeff, I listened to this interview and you drew a distinction between how you handle your own finances (hodl, live mostly on a bitcoin standard) and how you think about the market as a fund manager.
I’m curious why you wouldn’t apply the same strategies you’d use in your fund to deliver a positive return in your own finances.
I agree that the vast majority of people are better off not trying to time the market. Per Odell, stay humble and stack sats. That’s sound advice.
But you’re an experienced fund manager who is responsible for eyeing liquidity like a hawk and devising strategies to lock in returns and avoid massive/lengthy drawdowns.
Is it a matter of principle? A mix of other considerations?
My dad grew up on a farm in Pennsylvania and was the last of seven kids. His dad was an alcoholic, taking him with him to the bar on many occasions. When he was 6, his oldest sister began attending a local Baptist church, where over time a number of the men asked her if she thought any of her siblings would want to come with her. She said, “Maybe my youngest brother,” and started bringing him with her. These men shaped his life in profound ways, and he is still friends to this day with those that are still alive. These men invested thousands of hours in him, talking with him, picking him up, helping out any way they could with the disfunction in his household.
He loved his dad and learned many things from him, but there were other things that he only learned from those men, whom he didn’t seek out and couldn’t ever have anticipated.
He came to faith in Jesus at an early age, much to the chagrin of his parents, who thought it was stupid. By the time it came time for college, my dad decided to go to a one year Bible college in the Adirondack Mountains, and his parents did everything to convince him not to go, arguing that it was a waste of time and that he ought to focus on his career. With the encouragement of folks from church, he went to the college, where he would later meet and marry my mom.
Mom grew up the youngest of three on a farm in Ohio, a surprise baby 10 years younger than her closest sibling. Her parents became Christians several years prior to her birth, and their lives changed dramatically. My grandfather was the kindest and strongest man I’ve ever known, and his life was radically changed by the love and grace of Jesus. He spent the later years of his life ministering to prisoners in the local jail, leading them in Bible studies and offering “graduation certificates” to those who completed the classes. He spoke about how moved many of the men, who had never completed high school or college, were to receive those certificates, in some cases crying on the phone with their family members telling them about their accomplishment. Several of those men came to his memorial service and told us how grateful they were for his life and ministry.
While they (especially my dad) had experienced life and reality both before and after Jesus, there was never a point when I didn’t believe. While I loved memorizing Scripture as a child, being a Christian was all I knew, and that familiarity bred contempt over time. I went to public school, and had few Christian friends. Being outspoken about my faith made me weird in the eyes of most of my peers, and over time the desire to have friends and be like surpassed the desire to be truthful about what I believed. By the time I reached middle and high school, my identity was completely enveloped in sports. I joke that basketball was my real god, and I worshipped at the altar for three hours per day. My parents forced me to attend church (never in a domineering fashion but just as a normal part of life) and while I went, I was miserable and had no desire to be there. I remember a particular day as a 14 or 15 year old when my dad sat me down and tried to help me see the important of reading the Bible and praying for a few moments each day. I remember holding up a copy of the Bible in front of him and saying, “This book is stupid. Why would I waste my life reading it?” before tossing the book down and storming up to my room.
This whole time I knew Jesus was real but didn’t want to surrender my life to Him. I wanted to do what I wanted to do. I wanted to play basketball in college and then get a job working for ESPN.
Two years later I went to a Christian camp. The reasons I went were simple: girls and basketball. In God’s providence, my dad’s best friend was teaching from the Bible that week. His name was Tom, and he had sons who were slightly older than my brothers and I, but he became a father figure to us over time.
He would travel to professional sporting events and preach the gospel afterwards, and several times he would come back with gifts for my brothers and I. This always amazed me; he had his own kids yet was always thinking about us. Even during the time that I couldn’t care less about God, I loved Tom, because he loved and cared about me. That first night at the camp, Tom opened the Bible and repeated more or less the same message that I had heard for my entire life: that God created the world, that humanity rejected him, and that rather than punish humanity he sent His son to take responsibility for and save his enemies by dying for their sins before conquering sin and death by rising from the dead.
I could have articulated all of that information, but I didn’t love God. When Tom finished speaking, there was no voice from heaven or availing light, but it was overcome by an awareness that regardless of who I was or wasn’t and the ways that I had rejected him, Jesus loved me and suffered in my place. It wasn’t some sort of cold rational argumentation, but it wasn’t emotionalism either. In the span of minutes I went from having zero desire to know and obey God to only wanting get alone to spend toe with him by reading the Bible and praying. I was more shocked than anybody, I didn’t know any of the other kids in my cabin, and I spent the majority of that week getting alone to pray and read.
I was not (and am not today) some amazing, perfect person, but I was a new and different person and was set on a new trajectory by those new desires and convictions.
I say all that because I think nostr:npub1qex7yjtuucs6ac49kjujdgytrjsphn5a4pdscu2w3qlprym4zsxqfz82qk is absolutely correct; there is no combination of words alone in English or any other language that can convince him or anyone else of the reality of God, because that’s not my experience nor the experience of many of Christians down through the ages. Spiritual reality is a revealed reality. Many of the people who put Jesus and his disciples to death were Bible experts. They memorized much of the Bible. Their problem was not primarily the content of their heads but what was/wasn’t in their hearts. If Jesus was who he said he was, it would be a tremendous shot to their pride. They would be forced to admit that they needed forgiveness, and that their family lineage and best attempts to please God were insufficient and all doomed to fail.
At the end of the day, belief is meaningless if it’s not grounded in reality. Jesus is either risen from the death and loose in the world, steering history to his ends or dead and guilty of deceiving (wittingly or unwittingly) billions of people into thinking about him in false and undeserved ways.
The Christian claim is that there is no middle ground.
My counsel to people who find themselves in the situation you describe is to put Him to the test. Ask Jesus to show you the truth, and to uphold you with a willingness to seek truth wherever it leads.
As nostr:npub1e07k2u4s97cwyyts8enfq465a2xjna4xxlpfpz7aaandhavnje5qp8w4rg mentioned, we wrote TGATB to talk about this exact issue, and we’d love to send you a copy. I’m not at all saying that it’s some sort of silver bullet that will make every reader a Christian. Ultimately we care about and want people to find Jesus for the same reasons we want people to understand Bitcoin: because it’s true and it has fundamentally transformed how we understand and think about our lives.
nostr:note1a9vgtq8fs7uv2dsgxedvwvsum6qafuk8anhues8zdlr4ut0u9ryquz49sj
“Spiritual reality is a revealed reality.” Well said, brother. May the Lord give us eyes to see.
Sinclair Ferguson on what we should understand from Jesus' washing of the disciples' feet:
People often equate being a Christian with "living by the Golden Rule." Jesus did in fact, teach a positive version of it: "As you wish that others would do to you, do so to them" (Luke 6:31). We should love our neighbors as ourselves. But Jesus is not giving us a lecture on ethics here. His Golden Rule is not a piece of moral advice disconnected from himself. It is modeled by him, and the power to follow it is found only in him.
[...]
So, the issue for me as a Christian is not: "How would I like them to treat me? Then I should try to do the same for them." Instead it is: "How has the Lord Jesus treated me? Then that is the model for the way I will treat others. With his help, I will display the same grace he has shown to me!"
{Ferguson, Lessons from the Upper Room, 24-25}
I just finished listening to this engaging book about the pervasive influence of Christianity on the modern West. Highly recommend the audiobook read by the author.
From the blurb:
Is Christianity history? Or is Christian history the deepest explanation of the modern world?
Today in the west, many consider the church to be dead or dying. Christianity is seen as outdated, bigoted and responsible for many of society’s problems. This leaves many believers embarrassed about their faith and many outsiders wary of religion. But what if the Christian message is not the enemy of our modern Western values, but the very thing that makes sense of them?
In this fascinating book, Glen Scrivener takes readers on a journey to discover how the teachings of Jesus not only turned the ancient world upside down, but continue to underpin the way we think of life, worth, and meaning. Far from being a relic from the past, the distinctive ideas of Christianity, such as freedom, kindness, progress and equality, are a crucial part of the air that we breathe. As author Glen Scrivener says in his introduction: “The extraordinary impact of Christianity is seen in the fact that we don’t notice it".
Here’s a sample: https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0021/5210/3983/files/breathe-Look_Inside.pdf

Yes, and we must guard our hearts as NGU (purchasing power go up). The temptation to secure life through material possessions, whether now or in the future and apart from God, is real.
