Pedro 🧨's avatar
Pedro 🧨
_@pedromvpg.com
npub13nfd...vn7c
Learning Bitcoin - http://anatomyofbitcoin.com - http://satsigner.com - http://piratehash.com - http://bitcoinOPUXUI.com - http://satsconverter.io - http://bisq.network - http://bitscribble.com - https://chainduel.net
Pedro 🧨's avatar
Pedro 🧨 1 year ago
Had a great time presenting my "how to ditch your fiat life and start contributing to bitcoin" framework at the Proof-of-Work stage at #bitcoinamsterdam. Thank you to all that came to see it, specially those who already contribute to bitcoin! image
Pedro 🧨's avatar
Pedro 🧨 1 year ago
Inside the mempool and the last 20 blocks of bitcoin. The chain tip is center stage. Thanks to @mononaut and the @mempool team for this great visualization! #bitcoinamsterdam
Pedro 🧨's avatar
Pedro 🧨 1 year ago
All the halvings of the future at #BitcoinAmatersam
Pedro 🧨's avatar
Pedro 🧨 1 year ago
image "Renminbi" is the official name of the currency introduced by the Communist People's Republic of China at the time of its foundation in 1949. It means "the people's currency". "Yuan" is the name of a unit of the renminbi currency. Something may cost one yuan or 10 yuan. It would not be correct to say that it cost 10 renminbi. An analogy can be drawn with "pound sterling" (the official name of the British currency) and "pound" - a denomination of the pound sterling. Something may cost £1 or £10. It would not be correct to say that it cost 10 sterling. Nor can you talk about the number of renminbi - or the number of sterling - to the dollar. ... As it happens, Chinese people rarely talk about renminbi or yuan. The word they use is "kuai", which literally means "piece", and is the word used historically for coins made of silver or copper. Also common is "10 kuai qian", literally "10 pieces of money". "Kuai" is colloquial, like "quid" in the UK and "buck" in the US, but it is the word used in everyday Mandarin, whether you are in Beijing or Taiwan - which, of course, has its own currency, the new Taiwanese dollar, also known as the yuan. The same thing happens again when you break down your yuan into smaller units, the jiao and the fen (one yuan is equal to 10 jiao and one jiao is equal to 10 fen). There is nothing wrong with the word jiao, it is just that most people use the word mao instead. Anyone suspecting a link between the mao and Chinese former communist leader Mao Zedong would be mistaken. The character is the same as Mao's surname, but the word was used long before he came to prominence.
Pedro 🧨's avatar
Pedro 🧨 1 year ago
Bitcoin is the remote protest. Spark a peaceful revolution without leaving your house. No need to go crowd a government building or yell at bureaucrats in the center of your city. Just use bitcoin.
Pedro 🧨's avatar
Pedro 🧨 1 year ago
Buckminster Fuller on Wealth as Energy and Learning 1967