Erik Hersman's avatar
Erik Hersman
whiteafrican@iris.to
npub1q0al...04mt
Tech, Africa, Bitcoin mining at Gridless. Kenya Relay: wss://nostr-1.nbo.angani.co
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 8 months ago
Good Nairobi Bitcoin meetup turnout at Waitabit Coffee this evening!
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 9 months ago
Mountain retreat (Kenya). Discussing whether small scale energy + bitcoin mining can support conservation.
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 9 months ago
Busy day. Checking out a hydro site this evening that was delayed due to come civil works having to be redone.
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 9 months ago
Biomass bitcoin mining site in Kenya. It’s a finicky source compared to the simplicity of hydroelectric.
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 9 months ago
You gotta get to the bush for a bit just to relax if you live in Africa. Pace is different. image
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 10 months ago
Staring up a new thing at Waitabit coffee, since we have so many normal people asking about Bitcoin. Glad Felix, Vlad, and Collin will help! image
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 10 months ago
On to Los Angeles and then Houston this week. The US tour continues.
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 10 months ago
By my friend Gado in Kenya. Foreign Aid is (mostly) bad. Though I can make room for specific disaster relief. image
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 10 months ago
NEMS 2025 was excellent. Signal > noise. Loved seeing the Pod256 Foundation win a block and now their largest founder is the Bitcoin Network. Thanks to @Rod @econoalchemist @skot9000 and Rob Warren.
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 11 months ago
NEMS is high signal. Great people who are hands-on mining. Block 881423 hit live yesterday too.
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 11 months ago
Touchdown 30 hours later for the Nashville Energy and Mining Summit!
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 11 months ago
…the problem isn’t that African countries solicit foreign help and expertise. The paradigmatic examples of rapid modernization and economic development in Japan, South Korea, the Gulf, and China all involved a fair amount of local adaptations/deployment of foreign expertise. This, in fact, is supposed to be a key advantage of being a late developer. In my view, the real problem is how African states use foreign expertise. Instead of helping with questions of “how to get things done,” outsiders are often recruited into the driving seat and tasked with deciding “what is to be done.”
Erik Hersman's avatar
whiteafrican 11 months ago
It’s been 5 years. 4 since we knew these weren’t necessary. Why don’t airports remove them?