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Skyler
Skyler@primal.net
npub1330v...2k82
Founder of Finite Supply, a design agency for bitcoin companies
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skyler 1 year ago
Ethereum is a poorly run company.
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skyler 1 year ago
Watching bitcoin find product-market-fit in a fallen world can drive a man insane.
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skyler 1 year ago
Ladies and gentlemen, due to recent events, I’m relaunching my world-famous book: Reasons to Buy Altcoins on my FiniteSupply.co shop. The world needs this book more than ever but it was censored and removed from Amazon for telling the truth! Get the book at: reasonstobuyaltcoins.com
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skyler 1 year ago
Thank you for disappearing, Satoshi. image
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skyler 1 year ago
“DrUmF launCheD a MeMecoin!” image
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skyler 1 year ago
Sneak peek of a NEW Finite Supply hat dropping soon… image
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skyler 1 year ago
Pretty sure we are almost ready to have self optimizing products. - Train Ai agents on existing customer demographic and product usage data - Present interfaces to them - Give them tasks to accomplish via Claude’s computer use - Observe results - Suggest changes - Fix the interface - start over Kinda want to build a prototype of this.
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skyler 1 year ago
"If you think good design is expensive, you should look at the cost of bad design." — Dr. Ralf Speth, CEO of Jaguar
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skyler 1 year ago
In 1947, two days after clipping Cuba and Florida, a hurricane was drifting out into the Atlantic. All predictions had it remaining at sea without further landfall, making it the perfect test subject for the newly minted Project Cirrus, a U.S. government- backed project bent on discovering a way to disable deadly hurricanes. The researchers planned to seed the hurricane’s clouds with dry ice, hoping that the ice would interact with the clouds and disrupt the cyclone’s internal structure, thus weakening it. So on Oct. 13, 1947, a plane flew over the storm and dumped 80 kilograms of dry ice into the storm’s swirling clouds. What happened next was a worstcase scenario: Instead of dissipating, the storm furiously swung nearly 130 degrees to the west and smashed into Georgia, where it caused $2 million worth of damage. Threats of lawsuits soon followed, with Georgia residents blaming the government for the devastation. Project Cirrus was all-but shut down before it truly began, and any research into weather manipulation was repudiated for decades.