Monday, October 14, 2019

Devcon Shows Ethereum’s ‘World Computer’ Is a Movement, Not a Product

News by Coindesk: Leigh Cuen

If there’s anywhere in the world where it feels right to believe in magic, it’s Devcon 5 in Osaka, Japan.

The ethereum community faces a daunting task: scale its blockchain ecosystem to securely support the growing demand for mainstream use cases. Thousands of technologists and passionate fans gathered at Devcon this week to grapple with the nitty-gritty, in a venue marked by rainbow signage. Among them sat 16-year-old Shawki Sukkar, a self-taught developer from Aleppo, Syria.

“I’m searching wherever I find an opportunity to learn,” Sukkar, one of the 50 scholarship attendees at Devcon, told CoinDesk. “People look smart here. They have a great mindset.”

Since his father’s factory was destroyed in the Syrian civil war, and his friend’s identity documents were lost as well, the unbanked Sukkar has taken a keen interest in ethereum-based identity solutions and financial products.

Beyond Sukkar, several attendees told CoinDesk they came to this developers conference, and other smaller ethereum-centric events worldwide, to learn by contributing.

Along those lines, Mariano Conti, the MakerDAO Foundation’s head of smart contracts, gave a presentation about how he lives in Argentina earning only a cryptocurrency salary. He openly acknowledged the risks of relying on an open-source experiment instead of his national currency deposited in a regulated bank. However, Conti said he trusts the ethereum community more than the Argentine government.

Conti’s statement garnered resounding applause from the audience, including several people who also use cryptocurrency as a survival tool. This type of testing ground, with participants who give feedback directly to technologists at Devcon, is a boon for the network.

Beyond that, however, the event is a key venue for determining the network’s priorities for the year ahead.

“Lots of narratives make a lot of sense,” ConsenSys founder Joseph Lubin told CoinDesk when asked to define ethereum, adding:

“The ‘world computer’ narrative is a useful and good one. It’s called the ethereum ecosystem, or the decentralized protocol ecosystem, of which ethereum will be a central component.”

The plan

Devcon is an anomaly among cryptocurrency conferences in that the content is both highly technical and deliberately accessible.

Panels and workshops, about issues like scaling decentralized applications, revolve around opportunities for questions from community members of all skill levels. Sometimes engineers raise issues they’ve dealt with in serving clients, other times users ask about price mechanisms. There are even several panels and speaking slots reserved for ethereum rivals, like OpenLibra or ethereum classic.

So far, there aren’t any finite plans to address the scaling limitations of the current ethereum ecosystem with the blockchain’s upcoming iteration, Eth 2. However, there are several proposals in-process and thousands of people more invested in testing these theories than they are in profiting from them.

“The scope of who has been involved is an iterative process,” Ethereum Foundation developer Danny Ryan, part of the team leading research for Eth 2, told CoinDesk. “And we fully expect that to keep expanding [the process] all the way out to dapp users.”

He said community members can contribute comments and requests to the process via GitHub and Ethresear.ch, adding there will definitely be a more concrete plan for compatibility between ethereum and Eth 2 in 2020.

Speaking of how the MakerDAO ecosystem will adapt to the evolution of Eth 2, which may not provide backwards compatibility, Ethereum Foundation community manager Hudson Jameson told CoinDesk:

“We’re going to work very closely with dapps, big and small, to make sure data, such as MakerDAO’s loan contracts, can be utilized or transitioned in Eth 2.0.”

In the meantime, Gitcoin founder Kevin Owocki, currently incubated under the ConsenSys umbrella, is looking to increase funding for open-source developers beyond philanthropy from original ethereum co-founders.

Since the Gitcoin fund distribution platform launched in January 2019, Owocki told CoinDesk it has grown to process $200,000 of cryptocurrency donations a month.

“I’d love to work for the internet. I’d love for software developers not have to work at a corporate job that has a monopoly on their employment,” Owocki said, adding:

“I think there’s a lot of opportunity in this community to create systems that will scale … for sovereignty of employment.”

Definitions in progress

Outside critics harp on the vague use of language when it comes to defining goals and objectives for ethereum development.

But, like most ethereum fans at Devcon, Owocki isn’t bothered by the experimental nature of ethereum infrastructure development, which is arguably less rigorous and conservative than traditional open-source projects.

“I think it’s more honest not to have deadlines when you have something fundamentally new and you need to do research,” he said.

ConsenSys security engineer Shayan Eskandari, a bitcoiner since 2011 who helped create some of Iran’s leading educational resources for crypto users, said ethereum and bitcoin have inherently different philosophies.

“It’s like comparing gold with ice cream. Ethereum is a playground where you can do almost anything you want, although everything [in the protocols] will change,” he said, adding:

“Ethereum isn’t about trying to build censorship-resistant [money]. It’s about a more open system.”

Ethereum’s figureheads seem to share that view. Beyond funding early experiments with grants, Lubin said the 1,000-person ConsenSys is hiring again, after a round of layoffs late last year.

“We’ve built the early stages of the decentralized World Wide Web, the strongest candidate to be the base trust layer for the planet,” he said. “We have quite concrete plans, but I can only say things in vague terms.”

Sources with knowledge of the matter told CoinDesk that ConsenSys is working on pilot projects with financial institutions such as banks and government entities, which Lubin confirmed but declined to specify.

When asked what he expects the ethereum community, including his company, to accomplish by Devcon 2020, he replied, “more good stuff.”

Joseph Lubin speaks at Devcon 5, Osaka, Japan, October 2019, image via ConsenSys


[Daily Discussion] Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Thread topics include, but are not limited to:

  • General discussion related to the day's events
  • Technical analysis, trading ideas & strategies
  • Quick questions that do not warrant a separate post

Thread guidelines:

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[Altcoin Discussion] Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Thread topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Discussion related to recent events
  • Technical analysis, trading ideas & strategies
  • General questions about altcoins

Thread guidelines:

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  • All regular rules for this subreddit apply, except for number 2. This, and only this, thread is exempt from the requirement that all discussion must relate to bitcoin trading.
  • This is for high quality discussion of altcoins. All shilling or obvious pumping/dumping behavior will result in an immediate one day ban. This is your only warning.
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If you're not sure what kind of discussion belongs in this thread, here are some example posts. News, TA, and sentiment analysis are great, too.

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Fortnight Tech Roundup & Discourse - IRNSS NavIC

Welcome to this week's tech round up and discourse post.

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EBay, Stripe and Mastercard drop out of Facebook’s Libra Association techcrunch

Club Factory raises $100M to expand its lifestyle e-commerce platform in India economictimes

Donald Trump joins Amazon's video game streaming platform Twitch cnn

Bill McDermott steps down as SAP’s CEO wsj

Elon Musk says that NASA is free to share all SpaceX IP with ‘anyone it wants’ gizmodo

NASA’s new Moon-bound spacesuit is safer, smarter and much more comfortable nasa.gov

Steam will soon let you play local-only multiplayer games with far off friends pcgamer

Dyson kills its electric car project and turns to solid-state batteries guardian

Amazon Music arrives on Apple TV pocket-lint

Google takes AMP to the OpenJS Foundation openjsf

Russia’s Yandex introduces an Echo Dot-style smart speaker techcrunch

Cisco hit by an internal network outage cbronline

Xage now supports hierarchical blockchains for complex implementations globenewswire

NASCAR could debut hybrids as early as 2022 thedrive

Apple pulls HKmap from App Store, the day after Chinese state media criticized its ‘unwise and reckless decision’ to approve it cnbc

Virgin Orbit plans to send cubesats to Mars as early as 2022 cnet

Call of Duty is the biggest mobile game launch ever, with 100 million downloads independent

Pinterest launches a new ‘Lite’ app for emerging markets androidpolice

Microsoft’s Your Phone app can now route calls from your Android phone to your PC blog.windows

European risk report flags 5G security challenges techcrunch

Toyota, GM, Nvidia, Bosch, Arm and others form new autonomous driving tech consortium theiet

China attacks Apple for allowing Hong Kong crowdsourced police activity app nyt

AMD’s Radeon RX 5500 is its new entry-level competitor to Nvidia’s GTX 1650 pcworld

Amazon, Walmart confront India’s slowing economy as holiday season growth stalls techcrunch

Essential reveals Project Gem smartphone with very long, unusual design engadget

Twitter admits it used two-factor phone numbers and emails for serving targeted ads help.twitter

Arm brings custom instructions to its embedded CPUs developer.arm

Sony’s next console is the PlayStation 5, arriving holidays 2020 theverge

Chinese firms Tencent, Vivo and CCTV suspend ties with the NBA over Hong Kong tweet edition.cnn

Eight Chinese tech firms placed on US Entity List for their role in human rights violations against Muslim minority groups techcrunch

Mars Curiosity Rover finds evidence of an ancient oasis on Mars earthsky

Instagram is killing its creepy stalking feature, the Following tab androidpolice

Ex-Tinder CEO files lawsuit saying sexual assault allegations against him are defamation theverge

Fire TV might not get Disney+ as Amazon and Disney clash over ads variety

Amazon introduces a Kindle for kids indiatoday

Apple’s MacOS Catalina is now available 9to5mac

Spotify gains Siri support on iOS 13, arrives on Apple TV forbes

Disney is reportedly banning Netflix ads across its entertainment TV networks theverge

Red Dead Redemption 2 is coming to PC in November rockpapershotgun

NASA shares 3D Moon data for CG artists and creators space

PayPal is the first company to drop out of the Facebook-led Libra Association economictimes

Iranian hackers targeted US 2020 campaign, says Microsoft bbc

Apple CEO Tim Cook slams Facebook’s Libra cryptocurrency as a power grab forbes

Google-backed Dunzo raises $45M to expand its hyperlocal delivery startup in India fortuneindia

NASA’s first all-electric experimental X-plane is ready for testing nasa.gov

Facebook is being leaned on by US, UK, Australia to ditch its end-to-end encryption expansion plan macrumorsInstagram launches Threads, a Close Friends chat app with auto-status wired

India’s Fyle bags $4.5M to expand its expense management platform in the US, other international markets techcrunch

Uber launches a shift-work finder app, Uber Works, starting in Chicago tnw

Redesigned Google Shopping goes live, with price tracking, Google Lens for outfits and more pcmag

Zuckerberg Plans to Sue if Elizabeth Warren Tries to Break Up Facebook gizmodo

Samsung pulls the plug on Chinese smartphone production techcrunch

Microsoft showcases an Android Surface 'phone' and dual-screen Windows Variant cnet

Microsoft’s latest Surface Laptop arrives in 13- and 15-inch models theverge

India’s NoBroker raises $50M to help people buy and rent without real estate brokers business-standard

Cybersecurity giant Comodo can’t even keep its own website secure forums.comodo

NASA awards $43.2M to Blue Origin, SpaceX and others for tech to take us to the Moon and Mars techcrunch

NASA launches a new planet-hunting telescope using a giant balloon phys.org

UPS gets FAA approval to operate an entire drone delivery airline nyt

Streamlit launches open-source machine learning application development framework techcrunch

WhatsApp tests self-destructing messages theverge

Europe’s top court says active consent is needed for tracking cookies techcrunch

SpaceX details Starship and Super Heavy in new website techcrunch

Hyundai is getting into the flying car business newatlas

Microsoft makes Windows Virtual Desktop generally available globally zdnet

Google's Project Jacquard is available on new Levi's jackets youtube

PayPal to enter China through GoPay acquisition venturebeat

https://i.redd.it/rnwzqv5qjis31.png

The Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS) recently become fully-operational and has been provided with the operational name of NavIC (Navigation with Indian Constellation). Developed by the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) with the objective of offering positioning, navigation and timing (PNT) to the users on a variety of platforms with a 24 hour x 7 day service availability under all weather conditions - in its service area with a position accuracy of < 20 m throughout India and within the region of coverage extending about 1500 km beyond. nih.gov

Having an autonomous regional satellite navigation system of one’s own offers strategic autonomy in military operations. The GPS that we have known and used all along is the satellite-based radio navigation system owned by the US government and operated by the American Air Force. During the Kargil War 20 years ago, the US refused to provide India critical information on the movement and precise location of Paki enemy troops. toi A need for an indigenous satellite navigation was felt earlier, but Kargil experience made the nation realize it's inevitability. Geopolitical needs teaches us that some countries can deny us the service in times of conflict, a way of arm twisting.

With an accuracy of <10 m on Restricted and Encrypted Service (RES) while an accuracy of <20 m on Standard Positioning Service (SPS), IRNSS will offer 2 level of services for very differing purposes. isro.gov.in \PDF]) Almost all Military and Reconnaissance applications will utilize RES while SPS will be available for civilian uses. unvienna \PDF])

The IRNSS space segment architecture consists of 3 satellites in GEO (Geostationary Orbit) at 32.5°, 83° and 131.5° East while 4 satellites in geosynchronous orbit placed at inclination of 29° with longitude crossing at 55° and 111.75° East forming an analemma. isac.gov.in Out of the 4 GSO satellites, the first sat IRNSS-1A failed in orbit due to atmoic clock malfunction. On August 31, 2017, sat IRNSS-1H was meant to replace defunct IRNSS-1A, failed to deploy due to malfunction in payload fairing mechanism. Though failures are not uncommon in space missions of even developed nations, India is not in a position where it can afford even relatively minor glitches neither financially nor in terms of reaching the higher goals it has set for itself. firstpost

IRNSS Analemma

Unlike GPS which is dependent only on L-band, NAVIC has dual frequency (S and L bands). When low frequency signal travels through atmosphere, its velocity changes due to atmospheric disturbances. US banks on atmospheric model to assess frequency error and it has to update this model from time to time to assess the exact error. In India's case, the actual delay is assessed by measuring the difference in delay of dual frequency (S and L bands). Therefore, NavIC is not dependent on any model to find the frequency error and is more accurate than GPS. toi

Studies have also shown marked improvement in GDoP (Geometric dilution of precision) values when IRNSS is used in conjunction with GPS constellation for position fix in primary coverage region of IRNSS. Hence IRNSS can be augmented with GPS to improve position accuracy in the given region. ias.ac.in

The IRNSS is being developed parallel to the GAGAN (GPS Aided GEO Augmented Satellite Navigation) program that in essence use GPS signals for navigation but after making them much more reliable for safety critical applications like in civil aviation., the ISRO SBAS (Satellite Based Augmentation System) version of an overlay system for GNSS signal corrections. earth.esa.int As of 2013, the statutory filing for frequency spectrum of Global Indian Navigational System (GINS) satellite orbits in international space, has been completed. hindubusinessline GINS is supposed to have a constellation of 24 satellites, positioned 24,000 km (14,913 mi) above Earth. wikipedia)

On Sep 24, 2019 Global mobile telephony standards body, 3GPP, gave its approval to NaVIC (Proposed jointly by Reliance Jio and ISRO). 3gpp.org \XLSX]) The approval has been given for the system’s use in Rel-16 LTE and Rel-17 5G NR specifications, paving the way for wider commercial adoption of NaVIC, allowing it to be integrated with 4G, 5G and internet of things (IoT). 3gpp.org \ZIP]) Thus, electronics companies can start designing and building integrated circuits and mass manufacture other products uniquely created to be compatible with NavIC. From what all scant information I was able to gather it seems Broadcom was first to introduce BCM47756 3gpp.org \ZIP]) chipset integrated with NavIC and Xiaomi Mi8 was the first phone to have the capabilities. insidegnss Will the introduction of indigenous satnav be another step closer towards being a global power? Comments open.

PS: Here's an interesting presentation prepared by Space Application Center that goes a little deep inside Navigation with Indian Constellation http://www.unoosa.org/documents/pdf/icg/2018/icg13/05.pdf

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And in the last, here's 19th-Century Vision of the Year 2000 by Jean-Marc Côté and other artists issued in France in 1899, 1900, 1901 and 1910. Originally in the form of paper cards enclosed in cigarette/cigar boxes and, later, as postcards, the images depicted the world as it was imagined to be like in the then distant year of 2000.

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https://i.redd.it/oyvr745vjis31.jpg

https://i.redd.it/q0vbh55vjis31.jpg

https://i.redd.it/ct8e855vjis31.jpg

https://i.redd.it/2e99m45vjis31.jpg

https://i.redd.it/77fey45vjis31.jpg

https://i.redd.it/2m6eva5vjis31.jpg

https://i.redd.it/i9n66b5vjis31.jpg

https://i.redd.it/z6obo19vjis31.jpg

https://i.redd.it/hgzq795vjis31.jpg

https://i.redd.it/5zndz35vjis31.jpg

https://i.redd.it/4ba96y8vjis31.jpg

Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:France_in_XXI_Century_(fiction))


Electricity : Fan Theory

First off I'll start off by saying I truly believe this show to be a case of "the plot doesn't matter", it serves rather, as an engine that fuels exploration into bigger picture stuff -- commentary on capitalism, a mirror to examine our own emotion as shown through character's reactions to events. So if I'm way off base here it doesn't matter and if i'm spot on it doesn't matter.

Nonetheless, I'm going to attempt and present what may serve as a means of "understanding" the why of the season finale.

The cosmic error we were informed of this season, twins, is also seen in computers, these technically are called soft errors, but they are sometimes caused by cosmic rays. Essentially, cosmic rays have a statistically significant chance to change a piece of data stored in memory. This change in data has the power to change the way a system runs if not checked and corrected but does not imply it has affected it or will whether or not it is caught or if that data can not be recovered.

Twins present a "cosmic error" because where one sperm enters, two babies leave. The race condition of millions of sperm trying to fertilize an egg is solved by simply allowing only one sperm to do so (most of the time, maybe it happens, idk). But that doesn't stop a random split from happening that can potentially put the mom's life at greater risk of failing to give birth by doubling the load.

Concurrency in computer programming is where two processes are able to run simultaneously. A race condition is made when those two processes enter a critical part of their execution at the same time, that is to say try to access the same piece of data from memory at the same time. Put simply, if you and friend each opened a cupboard, checked how many apples were stored, add a number of apples, each exclusively, and mark down how many should now be in the cupboard you both should know how many are in the cupboard right? Nope. If there's one in the cupboard and you add two, you've marked down that there are 3 apples in the cupboard. However, your friend has decided to put one and did it before you put yours back. Now you and your friend both don't know how many apples are in the cupboard, as he thinks there are two when both of you are wrong -- there's four. So the next time you both go back to check your data is completely unreliable and subsequent calculations will compound how incorrect you are. Even if you both end up with the correct number at the end, it's a fluke and more still missing the error. This only makes sense if you take a literal blind approach in which is you only can see what was stored once when opening it and cannot double check what was written down, you have to trust what was stored after opening as it should match what's written down. The answer in programming can't always be store it twice in memory (here memory means random access, not disk stored).

One way of solving this is through the implementation of mutual exclusion, also called a mutex. The simplest example of a mutex, both actually and in our example is putting a lock on the cupboard with a single key you must use to unlock when checking, lock while adding apples, and then give up so your friend might access the cupboard. This ensures that you both have the right data each time you check. I'm skipping over some stuff because the piece that's important is that only one can be inside at any given time.

Semaphores are another way of achieving this, but instead of using a key a system of counting is put into place. this is done by knowing how many of a given resource are available at any given time and recording it. Currency, often believed to be rooted in a gold standard, uses this system to account for inflation or whatever. Funny enough bitcoin actually IS founded on a gold standard. One that so far can not be manipulated. Alchemy presents a logical problem for this, since gold cannot be created through chemistry and thus there is a finite amount of it. Same way there is a finite amount of bitcoin that will ever enter circulation.

Today, gold is still thought of as valuable. It's brought up early on in the series by Dud that the more gold that exists the less special it is, and thus would lose its value. One of the most historically valuable properties of gold is its malleability, and prettyness which allowed for more ornate objects of beauty to be crafted without the need for advanced smelting and casting. Today that is of much less concern.

Silver, on the other hand, in today's modern age, has the advantage of being the most electrically conductive metal we know about. Second comes copper and in third is gold. Guess which one we use most often in circuitry and in wiring buildings. Conductivity is literally based on the Silver standard.

While in many ways Dud may be seen as inferior to Liz, intelligence wise, money wise -- double down on a bad interest loan by paying it off with a worse interest loan vs. paying it off slowly and painfully, etc. He is often seen to be coming out ahead in terms of sheer happiness and fortitude where Liz cannot. If one sperm in a race produced two non identical babies, neither inherently came in first from the get go. As I said above, neither metal, gold or silver, wins in terms of actual utility in the conductivity battle. However, Dud enters the lodge first, and gets struck by lightning.

Given the information we are given in the first season we are not made privy to a lot of things that become important. Primarily, that the scrolls might be the solution to cracking bitcoin and thus disrupting its backed worth based on the gold standard. So, here, the "cosmic error" of twins and the challenge it presents in this concurrent system is brought into the main stage. Liz and Dud are both on a quest but neither really knows what or why. Both survive extreme conditions they are put in both voluntarily and involuntarily respectively.

This all changes when Liz enters the Lodge. Up until this point Liz has not entered the lodge out of her own "choice", free will arguments here be damned. She doesn't go in because she doesn't care. It takes Dud not answering her texts for her to enter and when she does so the Lodge corrects for it.

If detected, a soft error may be totally recovered from, but if the system has crashed, the computer needs to be "rebooted" before any data correction can occur. If they were both in the Lodge at the same time due to a cosmic error which, in terms of my example above, changes the number of apples in the cupboard while it's locked or changes the total number of apples available. If they weren't physically in the Lodge at the same time holds no bearing, it's that they were a part of the lodge. As long as Liz is accessing the Lodge Dud cannot. While humans allegedly built the Lodge, it is impossibly complex to the point where it has literal doors it can throw you backwards out of, possibly as a way of rebirth and possibly as a way of creating a "plant". Liz just as easily could have not been kept on her feet had her friends not been there the same way Duds was from his near death experiences, however they were there.

For a door that opens out, and that no one knows how to access, it sure as shit is not protected from the obvious safety-precaution; securing it from being opened from the outside. Maybe it has been attempted but it just always fell down. But when the light next to the door is being repaired for safety reasons it's not like anyone says hey if we don't know where this door leads and idk, maybe we have some voluntarily blind girl living and running around fixing her seizure problems like, let's maybe just take care of fix this other hazard.

Brute force is used to open doors all over the place in the show, even as far as being used as a "lockpick" (axe), but is never used to unlock THAT door, at least successfully or on screen. Maybe it can't be bruteforced the same way brute force can't be used to cheat bitcoin (it can't, at least today). Quantum computing poses a very real threat to this, and actually every "lock" we think is secure. Like, won't get into it too much and it's not this simple but imagine just asking the computer what your neighbors wifi password is and it just gives you the answer without having to try an approaching infinite number of possible solutions. A very real threat to bitcoin and as a matter of fact all modern encryption, however to scare you less if we're smart enough to pull it off we're at least smart enough to solve the problem before we get there (i've been assured by our friends at google that their contingency plans can't fail, they also told me the titanic never sank)

This at least approaches an explanation to the apparent deus ex machina that is Dud's death. The Lodge is not a joke, and has real control of things. While running it exposes powerful implications into the lives of its members and those around them. I think it's clear here that the duty of the knights of the lodge, to protect it, has greater meaning than we know.

To this same affect, we see another parallel for modern networked computing to work reliably -- redundancy. One man cannot keep the Lodge alive himself, nor can dwindling numbers of protectors. So make more of them, and why not spread them out so if an entire area is affected by say 10 hurricanes at once, it doesn't take down the whole lodge and working knowledge of things. Redundancy in computing means basically the same thing, keep servers in more than one place and have the data they serve backed up and available in more than one place. This also mitigates the probability of data loss, though not entirely. As the lodge in London had no idea the scrolls were removed and the xeroxes made may have gone the way of Orbis, and potentially only one copy of until they were recovered in Mexico.

So far, my only intention has been to make parallels that may have not been made so excuse me while I hurl myself over the side of the boat and bring this to my conclusion on what to make of all this. Skip ahead 2 paragraphs to ignore it.

Simulation Theory. As the always headstrong @L_Marvin_Metz says so poignantly says "the earth is hollow". While, maybe meant to be taken at face value, it probably isn't. But figuratively speaking, definitely. So many of life's pursuits are hollow and we often see characters in the show being punished for these impure pursuits. What else could allow for impossible tunnels, resurrection, portals and magic? A lot of things but nonetheless, Simulation theory would also give a lot for credence to all the talk about "getting out", a reason why Liz and Dud can't be in the Lodge at the same time beyond some deus ex machina. Liz needs a reason to figure out the system and for her it's finding her brother. Whether or not she can (probably can't, if he is rebooted/born again why would that be up to us). Or that's what I'm going to postulate for season 3.

Either way the scrolls are there because of reasons no one intended, and all that talk about destiny and painting the future but not getting to actually make it up begin to make sense. The lodge will fulfill its purpose because it already has. The absurdity of simulation theory requires the possibility of multiple layers of simulation, as above and so too is below, also begins to make sense in this context. This could literally go anywhere so I'm gonna stop at this point. Dud is dead, for now in a sense. However, that's if him crashing out of that door covered in dirt wasn't just him falling out in the same sequence we observer it.

There may have been for a way less complex reason than I am making - that being actor availability and the inability to pay the highly in-demand Wyatt Russell both for opportunity cost on a show with a future unknown and for his actual need to have a minimum price that the show may not be able to pay.

However limited his role is has yet to be seen, and hopefully for the sake of everything will be seen next year, but we saw him get an emmy nomination in the finale -- at least I truly believe that (specifically when he denied the knighthood). But it could be from any episode this season probably. If he takes home the gold who knows what that extra prestige will do to any budgetary restraints on AMC's wallet in the future. Clearly he likes being in this show, so I see know reason why he wouldn't return as a lead if i'm at all correct about any of this.

Point of this being that we have no idea if any of this is intentional, if it was written in due to the unknown future of the show even after being renewed last year, always the plan, or not even touching on the plan. That's why deus ex machina can be both brilliant and convenient (Adaptation). If you execute it well, we, as an audience, can't say for certain how it entered the arena. I mean, specifically as a season finale. Plenty of other examples of it in the show, obviously. almost like it's part of a greater theme?


Tutorial: How to receive Bitcoin donations on your Street Art works. This tutorial explains in 3 steps how to receive Bitcoin donations on your street art works:

Step 1 — Creating a Bitcoin Portfolio

First, it is necessary to create your wallet , which will generate your reception address (the equivalent of a bank account that belongs to you).

Thanks to this receiving address, you will be able to receive transactions in your wallet.

The Coinomiwallet is one of the easiest to use , available on Android, iOS, Windows, MacOS and Linux.

You are free to use any other wallet: Samurai Wallet , Spot , Electrum … Make sure that the wallet you choose is recognized and trusted because hacks , phishing and scams are commonplace in the world cryptocurrencies.

Download the application .

Once installed, click on “Create new wallet”.

The wallet will generate you your recovery phrase (or “Seed”, which is the private key of your wallet) which is most often a suite of 24 words.

Write down your recovery phrase by hand on a sheet of paper and keep it in a safe place (be careful to keep it private, anyone who owns this sentence becomes the owner of your funds).

Confirm to the wallet that you have correctly noted the recovery phrase and choose a password .

2nd step — Create your QR code visual

From your wallet, you need to generate your QR code of the receiving address .

Go to “Bitcoin BTC” in the wallet.

Click “Receive” (if indicated, choose a reception address “Compatibility” rather than “Default” or “Legacy”).

Bitcoin receive address example1F4bwjr74bmcXwRu53Jh27JRRCWHHd4yrz

You can now retrieve the QR code with a screenshot and save the receiving address .

To put this QR code on your works, there are 2 methods; a very simple and accessible to all (printing on paper and collage) and the second is a little more complicated (cutting stencil) but more durable:

  • The easiest way is to print the QR code on paper with the mention “Bitcoin donations” at the top and your Bitcoin receipt address at the bottom and paste it into your work.

Download this template and add your QR code and receiving address (as above). Check that the address shown corresponds to the QR code by scanning it with a smartphone.

Optional: It is recommended to add your website (or social networks) to allow people to validate that this is your Bitcoin address (and not that of a person posing as you). Of course, this same Bitcoin receiving address must appear on the front page of your site (and in your social networks profile) to allow donors to verify that the funds will be received by you.

Once the sheet is printed, you can paste it on your next street artwork. Prefer flat and smooth surfaces for better adhesion of the poster. We must make sure that it fits in with the signature of the work so that we understand that the gifts are for you.

- The second method is to create a QR code stencil and use a spray bomb to put it in your work.

There are 2 possible cutting techniques: A manual technique that requires some basic DIY. The second technique is to prepare the visual Photoshop and Illustator then to call a provider who will cut the stencil for you.

1st technique — Manual: To make yourself the stencil, you will need a rigid sheet, a cutting support, a cutting scalpel, Masking Tape, a black felt pen, a clamp and a thin square grid.

To make the QR code stencil by hand, see this tutorial .

Once the stencil of QR code is made, make a stencil with the mention “Donate Bitcoin” and add it to the first stencil to understand that this is your Bitcoin reception address. You can write it yourself or use this template (below) that you can print and overlay your rigid sheet.

Once your stencil is ready (“Donate Bitcoin” + QR code), you can put it on your next work with a black paint spray. Prefer flat, smooth and clear surfaces for a better readability of the QR code. We must make sure that the stencil is integrated into the signature of the work to understand that the gifts are for you.

2nd technique — Stencil cutting by a provider: To create a QR code stencil, it is imperative that all the background of the visual is connected to allow cutting of the stencil, for this, it is necessary to go to a site that generates QR compatible stencil code like qrcode-zebra.com

Once on the site, choose the “Text” tab and paste your Bitcoin receipt address and click on “Generate QR code”. Your QR code will appear, but the design will not be the right one. There are a few changes to make. In the “Choose patterns” tab on the left, click on the first pattern (which looks like a square grid), then in “Choose eyes”, click on the first box (the basic square “eyes”). Then, in “Set colors”, choose the color black.

Optional: if you wish to add your logo or signature, you can add it in “Add logo”. The file should be as simple as possible, in black with transparent background that connects (compatible with a stencil cut).

Now that the QR code is ready, you can retrieve it with a screenshot or click on “Dowload PNG” and give your email address to receive the QR code as a PNG file.

Then, on Photoshop, it is necessary to couple the grid of your QR code with this model so that the mention “Donations in Bitcoin” and the 3 “Eyes” square of the QR are compatible for a stencil cut. Use overlapping layers and erase old “eyes”.

Finally, download this special stencil typography and use it to enter your Bitcoin receipt address used on your QR code. Check that the address shown corresponds to the QR code by scanning it with a smartphone.

It is strongly recommended to also add your website (or social networks) to allow people to validate that this is your Bitcoin address (and not that of a person posing as you). Of course, this same Bitcoin receiving address must appear on the front page of your site (and in your social networks profile) to allow donors to verify that the funds will be received by you.

Once the visual is ready and fully compatible for stencil cutting, you can vectorize it in Illustrator and save it in EPS or AI format.

Last step, send this file to a provider who makes stencil cutting.

It’s up to you to choose the provider that best suits your location, price and time. Choose a format that suits your job. For large frescoes, larger formats (A2) are preferable, and for smaller works, smaller sizes (A4).

Once you receive the stencil, you can affix it to your next work with a black paint spray. Prefer flat, smooth and clear surfaces for a better readability of the QR code. We must make sure that it fits in with the signature of the work so that we understand that the gifts are for you.

3 — Last step, communicate.

Let all those who follow your work know that they can now support you financially by sending you Bitcoin donations on your Street Art works. You can use the means you have available, your contacts, your website, your social networks …

To help beginners, here is a tutorial that explains how to buy Bitcoin.

To track the transactions you receive, you can open your wallet regularly to see your balance.

To receive a notification when you receive a donation, you can use your Wallet to track transactions at an address of your choice.

The public can also see your balance received on your address thanks to blockchain explorers.

Here is the balance of a donation address: 3Pboy9ucGEdQUHNu2rrC6RGq4jouRc4Grb

If you receive a lot of donations, it is a good opportunity to communicate on the amount received.

Good luck and good creation!

FAQ

Why use Bitcoin?

The money you receive is 100% in your possession because you are the sole owner of your private key (recovery phrase, or “Seed”), unlike other centralized means of payment (Banks, Paypal, Ulule, Patreon. ..), Bitcoin happens totally of intermediary of confidence.

How do I use Bitcoin?

Thanks to your wallet you create a private key and a public address. The private key (recovery phrase, or “Seed”) is a bit like the key to your digital vault that you need to keep only for yourself. The public address is your RIB to receive transactions, you can share it publicly without problem.

How do I exchange my bitcoins for USD?

You can at any time send your bitcoins on an exchange online ( Coinbase …) to convert them into currency (Euro, Dollar …). You need to create an account on one of these exchange exchanges, convert your funds into the desired currency and then make a transfer to your bank account.

A faster solution may be to use a centralized service provider that offers a Bitcoin wallet connected to a credit card to spend your bitcoins directly ( Wirex , Coinbase …).

This article is not sponsored by the portfolios and companies mentioned.

You can tip me here !

Btc adress :1F4bwjr74bmcXwRu53Jh27JRRCWHHd4yrz

Have a nice day and many donations ;)

From ; https://medium.com/@freetokencryptobounty/tutorial-how-to-receive-bitcoin-donations-on-your-street-art-works-22e05dd06889

Thanks to https://www.pboy-art.com



first time docker user. i need some help with setting up docker on wsl.

i followed u/nickjj_'s guide "Setting Up Docker for Windows and WSL to Work Flawlessly" up to the "Configure WSL to Connect to Docker for Windows" section where i learned that i also need to install docker on windows.

yes, the article was clear and mentioned this at the beginning, but being the i am, i thought i could skip this and install docker as i did in a live ubuntu.

so i went to docker hub, created an id and downloaded "docker desktop for windows"

how should i now set up docker desktop for windows (2.1.0.3) to make it work with wsl?

i have windows 10 home and installation failed because it seems it needs win 10 pro or enterprise version 15063 to run.

any work arounds to make this work?

i am trying to build an appimage for the r/electrum bitcoin wallet and one of the main developers suggested that i might be able to use docker on wsl.



btcpay on qnap-nas

I have a btc-LND node running on mint linux for about 6 months now and recently bought a QNAP-NAS. I'd like to migrate my node to the new hardware and additionaly get the whole btcpay package, maybe even btc and ltc working. I think Docker is the way of choice, but qnap-container-station (a docker tool with graphical user interface) behaves a little different and running this setup scripts does not work like in the guides.

I found out how to mount docker volumes, but my lnd.config always gets overwritten by a almost empty lnd.config when i start the container. Then after 2 seconds the container stops:

"loadConfig: either bitcoin.active or litecoin.active must be set to 1 (true) "

------------------------------------------------------------------

; my lnd.config:

[Application Options]

; set external IP if not using NAT

externalip=XXXXXXXXXXXX

; set node alias (seen in explorers)

alias=Bei_Gertrud

color=#ff3333

rpclisten=0.0.0.0:10009

tlsextraip=XXXXXXXXXX

bitcoin.basefee=0

bitcoin.feerate=0

listen=0.0.0.0:9735

; nat=true

; tor.active=1

; tor.v3=1

; tor.dns=nodes.lightning.directory

[Bitcoin]

bitcoin.active=1

bitcoin.mainnet=1

bitcoin.node=bitcoind

[Bitcoind]

bitcoind.rpcuser=XXXXX

bitcoind.rpcpass=XXXXXXX

bitcoind.zmqpubrawblock=tcp://127.0.0.1:28332

bitcoind.zmqpubrawtx=tcp://127.0.0.1:28333

------------------------------------------------------------------

I tried btcpayserver/lnd and nicolasdorier/btcpayserver images. Other docker images like pihole work without problems. I also tried a virtual machine with lubuntu, but it's quite recource hungry and slows everything down with 93% memory usage.

Has anybody had success on a qnap-nas?



Wealth Formula Episode 180: Is Venture Capital Right for You?

Catch the full episode: https://www.wealthformula.com/podcast/180-is-venture-capital-right-for-you/

Buck: Welcome back to the show everyone. Today my guest on Wealth Formula Podcast is Vanessa Bartram. She is the managing partner of Zora. Zora is a Tel Aviv based fund that backs exceptional Israeli teams who will become the next global leaders in impact tech. Vanessa began her career in investment banking in Mexico City, later founding the Miami Impact Company WorkSquare which she grew to twenty five million dollars in revenue. She holds an MBA from Harvard BA from Princeton and is a heritage fellow with the Wexner Foundation and now of course the next step for most Harvard graduates is to go to the Wealth Formula Podcast for an interview. Welcome to the show Vanessa.

Vanessa: Thank you happy to be here.

Buck: Great so let me start out a little bit just defining some things which you're involved in is something called impact tech. What is impact tech and how did you get involved in this space?

Vanessa: Sure. So impact investing is a broad and messy term. I think we're getting a little bit better at defining the space. But effectively what investors where impact investors are looking for is to have some quantified measurable trackable impact on a social or environmental outcome in addition to you know strong financial return. At this stage I think about 90% of impact investors say they're looking for market rate of return. So this doesn't mean that you want to you know save the whales and make less money, it's figuring out how to make the same amount of money that any other venture fund would or any other tech company would while also being able to track you know tons of carbon you know diverted or you know tons of food waste diverted from landfill or something like that.

Buck: Yeah so give me some examples of some of the impact tech companies out there that maybe people might have or heard of just to get a bit a little bit better sense of what that sort of the company looks like.

Vanessa: Sure so you know some of the companies that we're working with are working on everything. One company does data analytics for satellite/radar data and they're working specifically in the forestry industry. So for us you know for them they're looking to sell you know operational insights and forest managers about how to grow their forests better. But for us when we look at this it was really a carbon emissions play that we realized that we could help improve the carbon stocks you know in the because of their because of the intervention that they had another of our companies now is a company called waste lists you know they're working on the problem of supermarket food waste so the 30 to 40 percent of perishable products in supermarkets are thrown away right now and it's about one percent of revenue for supermarkets. So by being able to introduce a dynamic pricing that's integrated with the you know POS software in the in the supermarket can incentivize customers to buy a cottage cheese that's expiring five days sooner rather than the ones that's gonna expire in three weeks and that way you know for them it's for the supermarket it has potential to to up their margins which are very tight already by you know 30 to 40 percent.

Buck: Got it. So you know one of the things again going back to basics and defining things you mentioned Zora is a it's a fun but it's a it's a venture capital fund is that right?

Vanessa: Yes that'd correct.

Buck: So for some of you know as you may or may not know most of us in this group and our investor group we’re just a bunch of dumb real estate investors. Can you explain the difference you know this this is sort of new for I think a lot of people. What's the difference between a venture capital fund and say you know private equity or say angel investing so what how do you how are those defined?

Vanessa: Sure so venture capital, angel investing, private equities they're all the same thing and that you're buying some percentage of a private companies equity as opposed to buying company I'm on the public market like the New York Stock Exchange. So in all of these you know as an investor you're buying some shares of a private company so different phases typically are just what phase the company is in and what size the company is. So an angel investor is going to be the first capital that goes into you know a start-up or other company. An angel may be putting in anywhere from you know 5,000, 10,000, 25,000 into a company. Venture capital typically is the first sort of institutional round of a company fundraise. So they'll be putting in anywhere from maybe a few hundred thousand to several million. Private equity tends to be what's called the growth stage when companies are already established and they're just looking to expand operations.

Buck: Got it guys so that's helpful so in general you know part of it is determining you know how big the company is where you're in and presumably because of that there's different levels of risk reward profiles based on those kind of different time horizons for business investment right?

Vanessa: Absolutely.

Buck: So in terms of venture what is the typical time horizon you know for this kind of thing where I say you've got investors who are in a fund and you know what do you typically you know in a venture fund do you expect like a five years, ten years, you know some level of liquidity during that period of time?

Vanessa: It's a great question and I love that you're that you're facing and what you usually talk about is residential you know both my family. I came from a background a family that that's our family business so you know about 90% of my net assets are in multi-family residential real estate so everything you say I think is absolutely spot-on. Venture capital you know I tell everyone whether it's you're an angel investor even up to private equity it's an extremely risky asset class. This is something that I put in that bucket over five to ten percent looking for a different uncorrelated you know asymmetrical kind of return. So it's important to remember that piece when we're talking about the risk because then the risk of a venture capital has become you know we have this extremely risky asset class what's everything we can do to mitigate that risk and to do this as strategically and thoughtfully as we can. But to answer your questions were typical and it's illiquid is another another piece of this. And so the typical venture investment is a five to seven year hold. So typically a fund is going to spend about two to three years deploying the capital that they raised. So say someone raised over ten million dollars fund, it'll take them two years to sort of spend that money and make those investments they then hold it for five to seven years and then that harvesting period is another two to three years. So as a typical venture capital fund has a heavy shelf life of ten years which can be a daunting hold period for for some investments.

Buck: Yeah so in terms of what that looks like during that period of time there's often zero liquidity so I mean again going back to the parallel of multifamily real estate, we typically are looking at some dividends or distributions you know quarterly or even potentially yearly or whatever. But this is something that you got to say okay you know what this is your asymmetric risk play. Okay you buy Bitcoin and maybe you want to know invest in and this as well and you're just gonna forget about it. If you lose it you lose it. If one day you wake up and somebody says you meet you know five hundred percent on your money then that's kind of what what this is right?

Vanessa: Absolutely and then listen it can be done far more strategically that's that's what we're there to do. But yes it absolutely has an element of risk and it attracts people who are entrepreneurs and it's a you know we can talk a little bit more about the economics of it but it's absolutely a homerun business you know you're looking to have a portfolio and have those one or two you know big wins in there.

Buck: Right and then in terms of in terms of a homerun what is a homerun in venture language is that like at ten like 10x or is that a 5x I mean I'm just curious again these may be somewhat simplistic but most people probably in this in this audience probably don't really understand you know what what kind of metrics, financial metrics that, again not talking about specifically your fund as you know but just in general for venture like what if you're if you're talking about smaller allocations what are the typical targets like what's a win what's a what's a grand-slam and what is you know kind of a loss?

Vanessa: You're testing my sports metaphor here this is a sounder, but I can play, I can play. So typically our fund you know a fund that has is it in sort of 90th percentile is going to return 3x net of fees to its investors. So if you have a hundred million dollar fund that means you're returning maybe 350 million, 50 million are you know please other expenses and your investors end up in their pocket with 3x what they put in. So that's how that's how you get into the top decile of funds you know that's the same kind of numbers that we're looking to do, but then you're going down to the portfolio level and you assume each fund is invested and maybe you know 10 to 20 companies. So if we say that's 10 companies you're going to make the assumption that 5 of those companies failed totally, you know 3 of those companies you'll have like a small return on and that's maybe two to three times your capital, one of those companies deals on medium return which is maybe a five to ten and one of those companies you want to have a real outsides return that could be upwards of a 10 and somewhere a 20 to 30 kind of X.

Buck: Right I got it. And from a you know again understanding how I'm approaching this from real estate is there any sort of tax advantages to venture capital investing.

Vanessa: Not in this, you know we don't have obviously the the depreciation that you would have in real estate. Most everything as an investor you're buying into a limited partnership so you own a part of a pass-through entity right you own a percentage of that LP and then from that you receive a k1 and your gains are you know long-term capital gains so somewhere between 15 and 20 percent.

Buck: Okay got it okay. So let's talk specifically about Zora. Okay so when was Zora founded? Are you one of the founders and you know tell us a little bit about the story of the company.

Vanessa: Sure I am the founder and general partner. I moved to Israel about six years ago and started investing a few years after. And again this was a I always grown up with this idea of wanting to sort of do well do good while also doing well. This came from you know being second generation immigrant family that after running a series of different small businesses you know multi-family real estate and was able to grow you know reasonable amount of wealth there and I think as a child my parents did a good job of pointing out all of the things that I got to do that was not what an average child gets to do, whether that was going to summer camp or my education at a private school or studying abroad. So I think I always had sort of this question of how do people acquire wealth, how is it that once people have wealth they seem to be able to make more wealth more quickly, and what can we do as a society to sort of make sure that other people have access to more wealth, whether that's through financial education or starting businesses whatever that is. So that was sort of my you know social social justice lens coming into this world, but started my career and Investment Banking and really love the transactions I than the deal-making side. I was working in Mexico City where helping mostly third fourth generation companies sell themselves to foreign acquirers so going through the valuation and through the exit with them and after a bit after doing that moved to Boston to be my MBA at Harvard realized I was in entrepreneurial unfortunately while there, moved down to Miami started a company there doing financial education with low income you know bussers, janitors, dishwashers as a sort of job placement HR agency at WorkSquare and after running that business for a few years loved what I was doing did not love the industry and wanted the opportunity to work with more mission aligned entrepreneurs at a strategic level. By chance I came across Israel and started learning more about Israel and was just blown away about what a good fit it was for someone who wanted to do early-stage tech investing you know with a social environmental focus.

Buck: Why is that? Tell us a little bit about that you know why Israel was such a big part of it, why was it a good target for your venture fund.

Vanessa: Sure so you know first off we have about 6400 startups in Israel and about 40% of those have some social environmental sort of impact in what they're doing. So we have about 600 startups each in agricultural technologies in digital health and medical devices and clean tech, we have exciting new sectors coming up like food tech and and education and water technology all have 250-300 companies between them so really strong pipelines. I identified about you know 2,400 companies in Israel that were mission oriented and the way we were looking for and among those about 700 that were relevant in stage for us which is sort of pre seed and seed and I think Israel's really benefited you know with the the largest tech hub outside Silicon Valley it has the highest number of engineers and scientists or capita in the world. The government strongly supports R&D you know to the tune of about 400 million dollars per year for for small startups. The companies here all have a strong b2b focus from day one because our you know our population is only eight billion people you automatically need to be selling abroad. So that's a given. You know we have over 300 multinational companies that have a presence here whether it's a venture fund or Scouts for technology so from day one startups are working with these multinationals to sort of figure out the product market fit and the best reasons you know also evaluations here are far more reasonable. You know it's not hard to be more reasonable than what we're seeing in the US center market right now is craziness. We have far more reasonable valuations and our entrepreneurs tend to do about twice as much with the same amount of capital.

Buck: That's great okay got it okay. So you go to Israel you set up shop and when was that this?

Vanessa: It was 2014 when I moved here and started looking for deals on my own sort of as an angel that I could follow and put some put some money in and I would find deals you know this is a dating before you get married kind of things and a year to two years sort of following coaching these companies before deciding which ones to go with. I would put in you know a small amount of capital personally put together a 25-page diligence report and bring that to investors primarily in the US where my network is and have them invest alongside me for a typical you know venture capital fee.

Buck: Got it. So what's happened since 2014?

Vanessa: So we've invested in five companies as part of our demo portfolio and that was the sort of one by one you know each investment we did was a special purpose vehicle with different investors and then it came time to put together a small fund. So we're working on that now we've made our first two investments and have our third under diligence and we're really looking to be the the best of Israeli impact tech.

Buck: Got it. Is it too early to have any Vegas 2014 and now is too early to have any divestments or at this point?

Vanessa: Yeah so I first investments we're actually like started in 2016 we've had one we've had one exit so far yeah which was which was fun and to use sports metaphors there was a double you know now that not a homerun but it was great to be able to send some money back to investors and it was I think emblematic of the challenge that we see in Israel which you know we have great product and technology and the challenge is frequently knowing how to commercialize and get that to market you know the best way. So this company was approached by the largest Japanese education publisher because they wanted to expand the product through Asia so the team decided to go with that and have them distribute for them.

Buck: So let's go back again to sort of your buy box. so when you guys are looking at companies what are some of the characteristics that might be somewhat unique to to you and your in terms of metrics things like that what are you looking at?

Vanessa: Sure we're looking first of all we're looking at the niche of seed stage. In the past about five years since 2015 most venture capital funds have gotten bigger and bigger and bigger with the reasonable idea that if you're going to make an investment in spend the time doing due diligence you might as well invest more money at a later stage and have more fees and more you know successfully from the time that you spent on that. What happens is there's a real vacuum at sort of speed stage and for us seed stage is when a when a tech company is raising about a million to two million dollars, they’re pre revenue, what we're looking for is that they have some significant partnership with a major corporation that might be an unpaid pilot, a paid pilot, it might be you know a joint project and developing a product together, but we want to see that the company has abilities to access the kind of the kind of large-scale multinationals that they're going to need to be selling to and for us we're looking at seed stage we're looking at valuations of about four to five million dollars pre-money or about a five and a half, six million dollar valuation after is around this point and that allows us to buy about a little over five percent interest in the company and so we're writing initial checks of about three hundred and fifty thousand dollars on average, which means we're looking for other strong co investors in that round. We want other people with deep pockets with sector expertise that are also going to come in have skin in the and help us grow that company. I would say the other things we're looking for, we're looking for a short time to monetization so anything that we think is going to have a long regulatory cycle, anything beyond that be a class one we won't even look at. There's a lot of the clean tech here that becomes problematic for us because it's the time horizon is too long it's too capital intensive so we're looking for companies that can monetize in the next you know two years minimum.

Buck: Yeah got it got it. And I presume and of course those monetization I mean that money is all going back in the business just to be clear, it's not distributed or anything. So basically from from the standpoint, these investments are relatively small right three hundred three hundred fifty thousand like you're saying. So for a venture fund is there a lot of variability in terms of minimum investment for the actual investors in the fund, I mean is it you know usually, you don't have to talk about your fund I know, but in general do you have to you know is there these kinds of things sort of all over the place?

Vanessa: They are and I would say increasingly so and for the better. Typically in a firm this may be a twenty five million dollars fund I think traditionally they're going to have a minimum that's a 250,000 or a 500,000 but payable over you know a few years of the investment period and you know one interesting trend we've been seeing in the past few years a sort of the better access to startup investment through crowdfunding platforms. There's you know a large one in Israel called Our Crowd that I think is invested over you know maybe 300 million dollars in the last few years in Starbucks. The one challenge you know it's a real balance with sort of the making venture capital which you know in my mind is a terrible industry it's you know been opaque, it's you know people are running off the ball stairs and crazy fees, you know there's a lot of mismatched incentives between investors and the fund managers, so I'm not at all a fan of of the industry as it is, but on the flip side you know bringing the model to a more retail level I think can also be scary because investors are missing that diversification. I see investors you know coming here and you know putting money in one startup that they find that the guy seems nice and statistically speaking you're better off going to Vegas and you know putting your guns on red pen. So that's one piece. The diversification piece is another that's really challenging, you know like we were talking about before even the best angel investors the best don't know for a while which of the 10 is going to be the home run and which is going to be you know one of the hardest and so that's another piece of it. And the third thing I'd say is that you know whether it's an equity crowdfunding platform or even like a local angel group, it's really hard to get the best a little access, so again this is a this is a game of home runs you need to have access to the absolute best entrepreneurs and deals you can find and you know nine times out of ten the best deals, different VC fund severity you know are fighting for allocation and those deals before any crowdfunding platform or any angel group whatever see them.

Buck: So that's probably one of the reasons being in Tel Aviv is also advantageous as well right I mean I would imagine it's probably a little bit less competitive compared to the Silicon Valley venture targets.

Vanessa: Yeah absolutely and that's why we're really strict about staying in seed stage because at that phase when an entrepreneur is raising about a million a million and a half dollars they're shopping locally for investors. They're not taking the time to go abroad. Once they get to their series A when they're looking for three to five million you know they're going to New York they're going to Silicon Valley and suddenly the valuation is the same as it is in Silicon Valley, New York you know so my colleague Ryan Weinberg and I were joking about one startup that we saw that we thought was really interesting and had a four million pre-money valuation, they were invited to participate in Y Combinator in the valley and two months later after they finished the program the four million pre-money valuation was now nine million pre-money.

Buck: If you’re in that as an investor at that point it really doesn't really make any difference to you until there's some sort of liquidity event right? I mean that's not that that's great to know right, I mean just increased your net worth, but is there any you know what happens at the investor level when that happens?

Vanessa: So that was one trend since we didn't invest in because we anticipated before they closed the round the valuation was going to get a little ridiculous and so you know you're absolutely right. Being here locally we get to take advantage of the better valuation before people go shop them abroad but they're you know if you are in a deal you know where you come in at a reasonable valuation and other investors come in at what you think is a little bit crazy valuation and it's time you know, on paper you know we have to remember all these values on paper until you actually get your money back which doesn't have a central acquisition or exit and you know on paper you you double your money and however it can make it difficult for the company to raise additional capital you know at that valuation.

Buck: Right got it. Well you know I want to give you a chance just to mention anything else that I haven't asked because this is clearly not my area but I mean if you're somebody who's interviewing you, is there something or anything I've missed that you think is useful to know about the space about impact investing or just you know just in general about Zora?

Vanessa: Sure I mean I think it's important in this space if people are looking to get involved in venture, I would spend a lot of time doing diligence on different fund managers and checking them out, you know we talked about you know VC returns historically are nothing to get excited about. I think on average VC returns as bad anywhere from sort of you know 13 to 15% which when you are counting in the liquidity you know and the risk profile over what a market benchmark is not so exciting when you're looking at it used to be real estate is not so exciting. You know smaller fronts is not a bit of advantage. They're typically at 15 to 18 percent kind of IRR return. But the real sort of secret in this industry is a big huge gap between the good fund managers and the bad fund managers. So the top quartile of fund managers have traditionally delivered you know load 20 IRRs know 20 to 26 IRR numbers where it's the lowest quartile fund managers have been about 5 to 8 percent, which 5 to 8 percent to have your money locked up for 10 years it's you know enough to make your stomach turn. So I think a huge piece of this is picking the right front manager and doing the homework on that and that's really a question of who's gonna have the best deal offset. For me I really favor and admire homes that are run by entrepreneurs. They’ve been there, they understand what it looks like, they know how to add value in an operational sense, you know they need to have an ability to execute on a relatively short timeline, and they need to have skin in the game. You know I see some fund managers who have none of their own capital sort of invested in this and they're happy making money off the management fees whether those investments succeed or fail, and that's obviously a no-go.

Buck: Well this has been very very helpful and educational. How can how can we learn more about what Zora does and you know website or any other kind of information we can potentially get?

Vanessa: Sure so we put together a special page for Wealth Formula listeners. One of the Wealth Formula members, Jonah Mink is an investor of a few years and a good friend. Thanks to him, made the introduction, so glad to be with you today. And so if you go to our website and http://www.zora.vc/wealthformula, there's a special page and we'll be having some more informational materials for Wealth Formula members.

Buck: We’ll also put that in the show notes. Vanessa thanks so much for being on Wealth Formula Podcast today.

Vanessa: Thank you, Buck. It’s great to be with you.

Buck: We’ll be right back.


Bitcoin remains Bullish in Last Week Despite facing unfavorable Events

https://tokenhell.com/bitcoin-remains-bullish-in-last-week-despite-facing-unfavorable-events/

Paedophile who abused up to 200 children stabbed to death.

This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 76%. (I'm a bot)


Huckle was given 22 life sentences at the Old Bailey in 2016 for an unprecedented number of offences against children aged between six months and 12 years.

Twenty-three children from poor Christian communities in the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur were identified in 71 charges, although Huckle's tally of abuse which he catalogued on a "Pedopoints ledger" was much higher.

Huckle first visited Malaysia on a teaching gap year when he was 19 and went on to groom more children posing as a respectable Christian English teacher and philanthropist.

They found Huckle's paedophile manual called Paedophiles And Poverty: Child Lover Guide and a "Pedopoints ledger" in which he awarded himself marks for the abuse of 191 girls and boys.

Huckle crowd-funded the release of indecent images of the three-year-old girl in exchange for Bitcoins, achieving 105% of his target.

A Prison Service spokesman confirmed that Richard Huckle had died but would not comment further while the police investigation was ongoing.


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What is Bitcoin? A beginner’s guide

https://www.asktraders.com/learn-to-trade/crypto-trading/bitcoin-for-beginners/

Interview with Luxcore

https://i.redd.it/xqiyqnj54is31.jpg

Welcome everyone,

Today we had the chance to interview a member of the Luxcore team for their two year anniversary, Luxcore is a project in the crypto space with some very interesting innovative features.

For all the new readers, let me start by briefly introducing ForAllCrypto. ForAllCrypto was founded almost a year ago. Our goal is to be the industry leader in E-learning regarding cryptocurrencies. We’ve written a book about all the aspects that come to mind when you want to get started on trading cryptocurrencies. The book has already been released in 2 languages is scheduled to release in more languages in the near future. We’re also currently working on two other projects, one of them being a video-course on trading cryptocurrencies. The video course will teach you about the subjects you need to know when you start trading cryptocurrencies. We help our members with learning about paying taxes in cryptocurrency all the way to making technical analyses. The second project we are working on is a collaboration with a well-known European crypto exchange, which will allow a user to buy crypto or commodities like gold and silver on a predetermined date and time every week or month. Our main goal is to let people set up their own savings plans in crypto or a chosen commodity so that they can set up their own retirement plan.

LuxCore, the company behind the LuxCoin cryptocurrency and their groundbreaking PHI2 algorithm, with their everlasting focus on innovation will soon make the transition to a new revolutionary algorithm, called RX2 (a RandomX derivative). LuxCore continues to make steps towards worldwide adoption with its Proof of Stake Web Wallet and with products like LuxGate and LuxEdge right around the corner they’re well on their way to build an entire ecosystem. But what is LuxCore, and what are these products?

First of all, thank you for taking the time to do this interview with me, Jorik. Could you tell us a bit more about LuxCore, when was it founded and what is the main goal that is driving LuxCore?

No problem, I’m just as excited as you are talking about crypto and Lux in particular. I have to say when first getting in touch with ForAllCrypto I wasn’t exactly sure what it is you guys are doing. The E-learning book sounds like a great way for people to get more familiar with cryptocurrencies and the trading aspect of it. If you don’t mind, I'd also like to know more about the retirement plan in crypto but let’s do that after the interview. So let me answer your first question. LuxCore was founded exactly 2 years ago today, with a focus on designing and building enterprise ready security and privacy products.

Why did LuxCore choose for a combination of PoS and PoW? What are the advantages of this integration?

Up until this very day, the crypto community still hasn’t decided what the best consensus mechanism out there is. Proof of Work has an amazing track record of being immutable but has a colossal ecological footprint and often centralizes around ASIC mining farms. Proof of Stake is relatively new but tackles the ecological footprint and is much more accessible for your everyday user, but doesn’t have the long history of being immutable yet. We’ve decided to take the best of both worlds. We’ve been industry leading with our PoW algorithms and are soon to revolutionize the industry even further with the introduction of our RX2 algorithm. This hybrid form of PoS and PoW allows the more casual users to also contribute to the decentralization of the chain.

I’ve heard a lot about the up and coming algorithm, RX2. Can you tell me what the fuss is all about, what makes RX2 so special?

In order to fully understand what makes RX2 so special we’d have to dive deeper into ASIC mining. ASIC, short for “application-specific integrated circuit”, miners boast an integrated circuit customized for a very specific use - mining. These miners have improved energy efficiency, cost and performance. With volatility and increased hash rates, 2017 and 2018 saw the market decide upon two clear forerunners: Bitfury and Bitmain. With several mining companies controlling high percentages of computational power on the Bitcoin network, threats to the network’s immutability and decentralization grew all too real. RX2 is designed for ASIC resistance and acts as a safeguard against this specialized mining hardware by its simulation of virtual CPU. The general-purpose CPU optimization enables more participants to secure the network, as they no longer need the purchase specialized mining hardware. This will result in a more egalitarian distribution of block rewards which, with our hybrid consensus model, increases decentralization of the chain.

It looks like LuxCore values the decentralization of the chain, can you tell me how the proof of stake web wallet fits into this?

Security and decentralization is the thing we value most, so I’m glad you asked. We at LuxCore feel that in order for cryptocurrencies to gain mass adoption we need to improve the user experience as a whole, whilst not messing with security. Private keys are insanely secure, but they’re not easy to use for the everyday user. Proof of Stake is a great way of letting people participate in increasing the chains decentralization, but not everyone is running a server 24/7. We’ve created the Proof of Stake Web Wallet, which we believe is a great step towards worldwide adoption. With the Web Wallet users can create an account and pay with their Lux anywhere in the world, at any time. The Web Wallet also optimizes for staking, this way you’re contributing to the decentralization of the chain and receive rewards in return. On top of all that, the Wallet will be fully maintained by the LuxCore team, this way you’ll never have to perform difficult wallet upgrades again.

If Luxcore is maintaining the web wallet, can you still guarantee that everything is completely decentralized?

The web wallet is designed to tackle the centralization issue. By spreading wallets across many of our highly secured servers across the world, these coins aren’t as centralized as you would think. Due to the hybrid nature of our chain, Proof of Stake isn’t the only way our chain verifies transactions. Even if all the coins on the network would be in a single place, you’re still only holding 50% of the network, consensus-wise.

Let’s move on to LuxGate. LuxCore claims to be the first that will launch a decentralized exchange, but a quick search on the web shows me several exchanges out there already claim to be decentralized, what makes you say you’re the first?

We claim to be among the first truly decentralized exchange. We’ve also seen a lot of decentralized exchanges launch into the world, but as far as we’re aware of, none of them is truly decentralized. CryptoBridge being the latest example. They claimed to be decentralized, but out of the blue enforce KYC on their users. Now users have to submit to KYC to get their funds back, how is that decentralized?

So now the question remains, what makes LuxGate different from what’s already out there?

The most important change is that LuxGate uses atomic swaps and smart contract order books to allow for peer to peer trading, directly from their own wallet. Because of this, users can trade without interference of a third party with a small side benefit: no trading fees. I have to say I’m so excited about LuxGate, it really gives power back to people. Which is why we’re all into crypto in the first place, right?

You’re absolutely right! Zero fees, that almost sounds too good to be true though. Where does LuxCore make their money if there are no fees to be paid?

I agree with you, it does sound too good to be true, doesn’t it? We don’t make any money, not from LuxGate at least. We strongly believe that for crypto to gain traction, we as a community have to strive for a better user experience. We’ve seen exchanges getting hacked, enforce KYC, CEO’s leaving with funds. Mainstream media paying a lot of attention to these events scares the users new to crypto. LuxGate will be a safe environment for everyone to use and having this platform out there will help the entire ecosystem. Currently we are asking projects that are being listed to have a holding in Lux. This doesn’t benefit us directly, but will help support the project, the chain’s decentralization and gives the project the attention it deserves. Providing a useful tool for the crypto community is beneficial to us because it does wonders for our brand recognition. So even if we're not making money on fees, we are supporting the community and getting awareness for that.

Amazing to see that you guys are really trying to build a brand around this instead of a get rich quick scheme! Could you tell me something more about LuxEdge, I believe that the safe environment that you’re talking about is also what you’re trying to accomplish with that, but for developers in particular, right?

Exactly, we strongly believe that people should be in charge of their own life without interference of third parties. LuxEdge is a platform that will run on top of our decentralized file storage. It will allow developers to push their code, access it anywhere in the world, without depending on a centralized party, like GitHub. Back in July GitHub confirmed to have blocked developers in Iran, Syria and Crimea, they’ve been denied access to their own code. With LuxEdge we’re building a platform that will allow developers to stay in charge of their own code, so that they can continue to develop the beautiful things we all enjoy.

I have to say I’m even more excited about LuxCore now than I was at the start of the interview and you can be sure I will continue to follow the project. If my readers want to follow your project too, what would be the best place for them to go to?

We have an amazing community that discusses topics daily on our Discord [Discord] and Telegram [Telegram]. But we also have our Reddit [Reddit], Twitter [Twitter] and Facebook [Facebook] for a more casual way of staying up to date.

We want to thank you for your time and we will keep in touch!

This was our interview with the Luxcore Team, if you have any questions, please feel free to comment on this post. I want to thank all of you for reading the interview and if you liked it make sure to check Luxcore and Forallcrypto's channels!

If you want to know more about ForAllCrypto: