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TAPEBOY
kondwani@nostr.com
npub16ecx...8puf
From Malawi, African soil to the global.
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TAPEBOY 3 weeks ago
Dear Friends, I’m writing as a Bitcoin Volunteer doing grassroots education work in rural Malawi — trying to build something real, offline, and resilient, using the same principles that made Bitcoin work in the first place. The project is called Bitcoin Study Hubs: decentralized, physical Bitcoin learning spaces for places where the internet is unreliable, institutions are weak, and education is mostly theoretical. I want to be honest about a simple constraint I’m facing right now. I’m trying to run this project on a phone. And there’s a basic law of physics that explains why this isn’t sustainable: > A machine cannot produce more energy than it consumes. Right now, the “machine” doing the work — me, plus a phone — is energy-starved. --- The Physics of the Problem Phones are great for messaging, posting, and quick coordination. They’re not built for sustained, heavy work. Most of what Bitcoin Study Hubs requires is slow, focused, energy-intensive work: Writing and translating learning material (including Chichewa) Preparing offline teaching content Structuring curriculum and lesson plans Documenting spending and progress as proof of work Coordinating facilitators and supporters Archiving and organizing materials for replication Trying to do this on a phone is like asking a small generator to power a workshop. No matter how motivated the operator is, output is capped by input. That’s not a personal limitation — it’s physics. --- Why a Laptop Changes Everything A basic, reliable laptop isn’t about comfort or convenience. It’s about supplying enough “energy” for the system to function properly. With a laptop, this project immediately gains: Higher quality learning materials Faster and more consistent output Better documentation and transparency Reduced friction and burnout More actual teaching, less fighting with tools In other words: more proof of work per sat consumed. --- The Bigger Picture Bitcoin Study Hubs are physical, community-led learning spaces in rural Malawi where people: Learn Bitcoin in local languages Use simple, resilient tools like Machankura and Bitchat Learn by doing, not by certificates Train local facilitators instead of relying on outsiders Build small, village-level Bitcoin economies Each hub is independent but aligned by shared Bitcoin values — just like Bitcoin nodes. Phase 1 focuses on establishing the first hub, training 3–5 local facilitators, and proving that Bitcoin education works offline, under real constraints. Full project details: All spending and progress are documented publicly. --- How You Can Support (The Energy Input) If this project resonates, a laptop is one of the highest-leverage inputs you could provide right now. You can help in three ways: 1. Fund or Provide a Laptop Helping cover the cost of a basic, durable laptop — or sourcing one — directly removes the biggest bottleneck in this system. 2. Support With Sats Contributions toward the broader 5 million sats Phase 1 goal also help make this possible. Lightning: malawi@8333.mobi laborcrush180@shockwallet.app amoyah@minibits.cash On-chain: SegWit: bc1qxn9d4xewhp66rayree604y7ckka3eyvg2p9av2 Taproot: bc1pqltuyslegpwn5he0kwny84v8ewmhlmr0vuxcvc6npxest7ffvy5s5qrvr0 Silent: sp1qqdgcyuvqewkhjuxhzjpxpmpm4u9an7gge7lpczpq8273gtm0aspuuqc3jh7k8jwt5jtvenlww47kdwffgrghqjsn95m3qkp7t7r9jgm69g9c8l5z 3. Coordinate Directly If you prefer contributing tools or resources instead of sats, reach out on Nostr and we’ll coordinate what actually helps on the ground. Nostr: npub16ecxhn2xscwjt2mmn2ls59yms0avkvd0z3t64v70pew6vfg9y6qqh38puf --- Bitcoin grew because people shared tools, knowledge, and energy — often quietly, often under constraint. This laptop isn’t about luxury. It’s about respecting physics. If this resonates, I’d appreciate your support — through sats, tools, signal-boosting, or thoughtful feedback. With respect, Kondwani Bitcoin Study Hubs Malawi 🟠
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TAPEBOY 2 months ago
Hey Bitcoiners, we need your help. image Out here in rural Malawi, we’re building Bitcoin Study Hubs — small, simple spaces where kids, farmers, and families come to learn what Bitcoin really is and how to use it in their everyday lives. The impact is promising… but we’re missing one big thing: We don’t have the learning materials yet. What we have are digital format of some Bitcoin resources, including those by @DarthCoin ₿⚡️ and others, shared on SN here: When resources allow, we'll start printing out these, because our target is the rural communities where there's no electricity grid. We’re looking for anyone in the Bitcoin community who can donate: Bitcoin education books Kids’ Bitcoin storybooks Beginner guides Teaching aids Printed diagrams Learning posters Any Bitcoin, or Lightning material Anything you think would help a village learn Bitcoin from scratch Even one book or one set of printed sheets can change a whole hub. These communities need to have libraries. Kids need to own books. When a Bitcoin book lands here, it will definitely change the entire community for the better. If you’ve got extra books, old copies, or teaching materials lying around, please consider sending them to us. We’ll put them straight into the hands of people who are hungry to learn and ready to build real Bitcoin circular economies from the ground up. If you’re willing to help, reach out: Nostr: @TAPEBOY Thanks fam. Every little bit matters. — Kondwani
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TAPEBOY 2 months ago
Bitcoin Amoyah is a Bitcoin-only grassroots movement born from lived experience, not theory. After years of struggling with painful, expensive remittances while working abroad, I discovered Bitcoin — the first tool that truly solves the financial hardships faced by Malawi’s rural communities. Since then, I’ve dedicated myself fully to building a path toward real sovereignty for people who have been excluded for generations. This project focuses on what matters: education, access, and empowerment. From translating the Machankura wallet into Chichewa, to teaching families to use Bitcoin on basic phones, to building local Study Hubs and future circular economies — every step is designed to give rural Malawians the tools to save, transact, and participate with dignity. I chose the hard path: Bitcoin-only. No shortcuts, no hype, no crypto distractions. And I believe there are fellow Bitcoiners who know this truth deeply — that it’s Bitcoin or nothing. If you share that conviction, I’m asking for your support. Not for me — but for the villages, the students, the farmers, and the families who deserve access to the same freedom we talk about every day. With your help, Bitcoin Amoyah will build: – Community Study Hubs – Rural circular economies – Open-source Chichewa learning tools – Weekly education programs – Merchant onboarding – Real, lasting sovereignty The mission is simple: bring Bitcoin to the people who need it most. If you believe in this, stand with us. Let’s make the rural communities a living example of what Bitcoin can do when it reaches the grassroots. May the Force be with us all.