Mandalorian

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Mandalorian
amisatoshi@primal.net
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Background in computer science, > 27 years in enterprise IT. Into science fiction/fantasy, art & design, history and economics. Author of THE CRESCENT AND THE CRYPT, BITCOIN IS HALAL & THE ROBOTS ARE ALIVE! 👉 Get the books from www.ashikusmanbooks.com. New All-in-One Bitcoin/Lightning/Nostr Wallet project: www.ijmawallet.com. For book translations, ✉️ bitcoinishalal@proton.me.

Notes (20)

🪙✨ “But won’t we run out of bitcoin?” Layla’s question is one many people ask when they first hear there are only 21 million bitcoin in existence. It sounds like a tiny number compared to the billions of people on Earth. But here’s the magic: Each bitcoin can be split into 100 million tiny units called satoshis (or sats). That means there are 2.1 quadrillion sats in total—plenty to go around! 💬 In 'Bitcoin is Halal: Adam and Layla Discover Digital Gold', we break down complex financial ideas like this into simple, culturally grounded explanations. Baba’s answer to Layla isn’t just cute—it’s empowering. It shows how Islamic values and modern technology can coexist beautifully. 📖 Whether you're a curious kid, a thoughtful parent, or an educator exploring halal finance, this book is your gateway to understanding Bitcoin through a lens of ethics, clarity, and fun. 🔍 Want to know more about how Bitcoin works, why it's halal, and how it fits into everyday life? 👉 Visit www.ashikusmanbooks.com to explore Bitcoin is Halal and join the journey. #BitcoinIsHalal #Bitcoin #SatoshisForEveryone #IslamicFinance #BitcoinExplained #EthicalMoney #BitcoinEducation image
2025-11-17 23:32:55 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Taken from the Foreword by nostr:nprofile1qqstc6e4z5chqxvt4heztekcafrvxalezqfx2kxey3kazemnt3kkxfcpremhxue69uh5y6t5vdhkjmjdv94xc6tn9ehx7um5wgcjucm0d5qj6amnwvaz7tmdv46xzmtpv3jk2mnpdqhxxmmd9ahx7um5wfex2mrp0yh56atnd35k6nn0wd68ym0cryp from the Arabic edition of Bitcoin Is Halal: أكثر من عشرين عاماً من اليوم قد أسلمتُ بنعمة الهداية من الله ولله الحمد وقبل إسلامي كنت نصرانياً. من الأشياء الذي جلبني إلي الإسلام هو أهمية العدالة بين الناس في حياتهم ومعاملاتهم ومع ذلك تمسك المسلمين بشريعة وأحكام وحكمة فطرية. كذلك الذي أعجبني كثيرا في شريعة الإسلام كان موقف المسلمين تجاه مسألة الربا. منذ الصغر عرفتُ قبل الإسلام أن من أقبح المعاملات التي حرمها الله في وحيه حتى عند النصارى هو الربا, لكن تربيتُ في بيئة قد أباحه وجعله جزء من حياتنا اليومي. بمجرد أن سمعت أن تحريم الربا كان جزءا من الإسلام ولا يزال المسلمون يتبعونه حتى اليوم اشتعل قلبي إيمانا وأثار ذلك اهتمامي وقربني إلى الإسلام. More than twenty years ago today, I was blessed by Allah to be guided to Islam, al-Hamdulillah. Before my conversion to Islam, I was a Christian. One of the things that brought me close to Islam was the importance of justice between people in their lives and their dealings, and with that, the Muslims' adherence to a divine law, its rulings, and its innate wisdom. Likewise, what greatly impressed me about Islamic law was the Muslims' stance towards the issue of usury (riba). From a young age I knew, before my conversion to Islam, that one of the ugliest transactions forbidden by Allaah in His revelation, even according to Christians, was usury. However, I was raised in an environment that permitted it and made it a part of our daily life. As soon as I heard that it’s prohibition was a part of Islamic law and that Muslims still adhere to this prohibition to this day, my heart was ignited with faith, it piqued my interest, and it drew me closer to Islam. فمنذ بداية إسلامي تمسكتُ بهذه المهمة وهي تجنب الربا بأنواعها وزجر كل ما يعاونه فبذلك كنت أدعو إلى العودة إلى العملة الذهبية والفضية مثل الدينار والدرهم. لكن رأيت بأن الذهب والفضة لهما ما يصعب استخدامهما في معاملاتنا التجارية اليوم. فحينما سمعت عن البيتكوين عرفت مباشرة بأنه قد يسد حاجتنا في العملة العصرية يمكن استخدامها في جميع أنواع المعاملات الحديثة. لهذا السبب كنت داعيا إلى استخدام عملة خالية من رائحة الربا وغباره. So, from the beginning of my conversion to Islam, I adhered to this important matter: avoiding all types of usury (riba) and warning against anything that assists it. Because of this, I advocated for a return to gold and silver currency, like the Dinar and Dirham. However, I saw that gold and silver have aspects that make them difficult to use in our commercial transactions today. So when I heard about Bitcoin, I immediately knew that it could fulfill our need for a modern currency that can be used in all types of contemporary transactions. For this reason, I have been advocating for the use of a currency free from the scent and dust of usury. هذا الكتاب بين يديك جهد بديع مدهش في تعليم مسألة البيتكوين. جودته في طريقته السهلة كونه على سبيل الكتاب للصغار لكن مليء بالفوائد ينفع به الكبار. فقمت بترجمته إلى اللغة العربية لكي يستفيد من المسلمين في بلادهم العربية. نحن المسلمون بحاجة إلى طريقة أخرى في معاملاتهم المالية كي نبعد غبار الربا عن أراضينا. طريقة الكتاب هي الحوار بين آدم وأخته ووالديهما إذ قاما بتعليمهما ما هو البيتكوين؟ من أين جاء؟ هل يمكن أن نثق به؟ وأهم السؤال وهو ”هل البيتكوين يكون حلالا؟“. This book in your hands is a marvelous and astonishing effort in teaching the subject of Bitcoin. Its quality lies in its simple method, being in the style of a children's book, yet it is filled with benefits that are valuable for adults. I have translated it into Arabic so that Muslims in Arab countries may benefit from it. We Muslims are in need of another method for our financial transactions to keep the dust of usury away from our lands. The book's method is a dialogue between Adam, his sister, and their parents, as they teach them: What is Bitcoin? Where did it come from? Can we trust it? And the most important question: "Is Bitcoin permissible (Halal)?” قمت بمتابعة ما يدعا في هذا الكتاب في كون البيتكوين حلالا ووجدته موفق فيما هو مكتوب وموافق للشريعة حسب علمي. في رايي, هذا الكتاب سيستفيد منه كل من قرأه, في مسائل الدينية والأمور الدنيوية. فهو يجمع بين علم الواقع وعلم الشريعة. I looked into the claims made in this book regarding Bitcoin being permissible (Halal) and found the arguments presented in the book to be sound and in accordance with Islamic law, to the best of my knowledge. In my opinion, anyone who reads this book will benefit from it, in both religious and worldly matters. It combines an understanding of contemporary reality with the knowledge of Islamic jurisprudence. نسأل الله عز وجل أن يجعل هذا في ميزان حسناتنا وأن يوفق المسلمين إلى الإبتعاد كل الإبعاد عن أحد الموبقات الذي روى الشيخان البخاري ومسلم We ask God Almighty to place this in the balance of our good deeds and to guide Muslims to completely avoid one of the major sins which the two shaykhs, Imaam al-Bukhaari and Imaam Muslim narrates that عن النبي ﷺ أنه قال: اجتنبوا السبع الموبقات -يعني: المهلكات- قلنا: وما هن يا رسول الله؟ قال: الشرك بالله، والسحر، وقتل النفس التي حرم الله إلا بالحق، وأكل الربا، وأكل مال اليتيم، والتولي يوم الزحف، وقذف المحصنات الغافلات المؤمنات. The Prophet ﷺ said: "Avoid the seven destructive sins." We asked, "What are they, O Messenger of God?" He said: "Associating others with God (shirk), sorcery, killing a soul whom God has forbidden except by right, consuming usury (riba), consuming the property of an orphan, fleeing on the day of battle, and slandering chaste, innocent believing women [accusing them of fornication].” www.ashikusmanbooks.com image
2025-11-12 13:16:23 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
📅 On this day in 1937, Alan Turing published his groundbreaking paper "On Computable Numbers" - laying the foundation for everything we now call computing and AI. 🤖 In our book "The Robots Are Alive! Adam and Layla Demystify AI", we introduce young readers to Turing's famous test through the eyes of siblings Adam and Layla. Instead of complex academic jargon, they discover it's like playing "Guess Who?" - but instead of guessing faces, you're figuring out if you're chatting with a human brain or a robot brain! 💡 Why does this matter today? Because as AI becomes part of our daily lives, our children need to understand: • What intelligence really means • How to think critically about technology • That the questions Turing asked in 1937 are MORE relevant now than ever The Turing Test isn't just history - it's the foundation for understanding modern AI, from chatbots to the assistants in our phones. And if we can't explain these concepts to our youth in simple terms, how can we expect them to navigate an AI-powered future? 📚 "The Robots Are Alive!" breaks down big AI concepts into family-friendly conversations that stick. Because the future of AI isn't just being built by engineers - it's being shaped by the next generation who understands it. 🤖 “The Robots Are Alive! Adam and Layla Demystify AI” is available NOW on Amazon and Google Play. 👉Amazon (paperback): http://bit.ly/47lxNLS 📬 Check your regional Amazon site for best pricing and delivery options. 👉Google Play (ebook): http://bit.ly/4qiAaHR ⭐️ For more details and downloadable worksheets, visit www.ashikusmanbooks.com #AlanTuring #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #STEMEducation #TuringTest #AILiteracy #TheRobotsAreAlive #ComputerScience #FamilyLearning image image image
2025-11-12 09:42:04 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Record your children's birthdays by block height. #Bitcoin Timechain. image
2025-11-10 08:55:41 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
nostr:nprofile1qqswpysavy8wv4fednavdjvs0d4dz8e6rh09wuqzncfgfek2url8h4gpramhxue69uhky6t5vdhkjmndv94xc6tn9ehx7um5wgcjucm0d5hszxnhwden5te0dehk7unwdajx2tnwdaehgu339e3k7mf0823yhl image
2025-11-06 23:49:24 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Bye Bye Fiat. Buy Buy #Bitcoin image
2025-11-06 23:46:37 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
In a world where hash power is weaponised and truth itself is under siege, The Consensus War ignites a digital jihad against the forces of centralisation. As the World Economic Consortium unleashes a ghost chain to rewrite history, a decentralised alliance of rebels, scholars, and guerrilla miners rise to defend the soul of Bitcoin—and the moral fabric of the future. This second chapter of The 21 Million Covenant plunges deeper into the cyberpunk Muslim Futurist universe, where blockchain warfare meets spiritual resistance. From Sheikh Ibrahim’s fatwa against financial falsehood to Nyx’s scarlet-threaded code that exposes the forgery, every moment pulses with urgency and conviction. The imagery is cinematic: off-grid ASICs humming in bakeries and basements, a ghost chain advancing like a digital Dajjal, and a global community choosing conscience over control. https://blockchainology.substack.com/p/the-consensus-war #cyberpunk #muslimfuturism #bitcoin image
2025-11-06 16:51:28 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
In a world where quantum code can rewrite truth itself, faith, freedom, and the blockchain hang in the balance. 🌐 The Quantum Gambit is the electrifying first chapter of The 21 Million Covenant—a cyberpunk Muslim futurist saga where decentralised warriors, spiritual scholars, and rogue coders unite to defend the incorruptible. When a ghost in the Bitcoin network whispers of an awakening AI—Cronus—capable of forging perfect lies, a global resistance ignites. From the storm-lit towers of Jakarta to the mint-scented libraries of Cairo, a digital majlis forms: Nyx, the veiled hacker; Sheikh Ibrahim, the scholar of sacred trust; and Ben, the fork architect. Their mission? Forge a quantum-resistant shield before the machine awakens. But the enemy isn’t just code—it’s the human hunger for control. As time collapses and consensus fractures, the battle for truth becomes a spiritual jihad against deception itself. ⚡️ Faith meets firmware. Sharia meets SHA-256. And the future is forked. Read the first transmission on Substack. https://blockchainology.substack.com/p/the-quantum-gambit image
2025-11-05 21:41:30 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Simon Dixon’s interview on nostr:nprofile1qqs2xpwv3yngvx7auhr3hwm06w2tkn82dm6lt7ryq2eynlzuavxwygqpz4mhxue69uhk2er9dchxummnw3ezumrpdejqzrthwden5te0dehhxtnvdakqes7lrg's "What Is Money?" show is a sweeping exposé of the hidden financial architecture behind global power, war, and economic control—culminating in a call for #Bitcoin as a peaceful revolution. In this riveting episode titled “They Control Everything: The Hidden Masters of Money and War,” Bitcoin pioneer Simon Dixon joins Robert Breedlove to dissect the invisible forces shaping geopolitics, central banking, and societal unrest. Dixon unveils the concept of the “Proof of Weapons Network”—a system where military might, fiat currency, and debt intertwine to uphold global dominance. He argues that democracy is largely an illusion, manipulated by central banks and corporate interests that perpetuate a debt-based Ponzi scheme. Key themes include: - The shift to a multipolar world: Dixon explores how rising powers like BRICS challenge Western hegemony, reshaping global alliances and currency dynamics. - Weaponisation of money: Fiat currencies are used not just for trade, but as tools of control and civil unrest, with institutions like BlackRock playing outsized roles. - Bitcoin as resistance: Positioned as a non-violent counterforce, Bitcoin offers decentralisation, transparency, and sovereignty in contrast to the centralised technocracy. - Historical and spiritual dimensions: From gold-backed empires to modern technocratic governance, Dixon traces the evolution of economic theories and power structures, urging viewers to reclaim personal responsibility in the face of spiritual and financial warfare. The conversation crescendos with a bold call to boycott the legacy financial system and embrace decentralised alternatives. Dixon’s insights blend economic history, geopolitical analysis, and philosophical reflection—making this episode a must-watch for anyone seeking to understand the deeper mechanics of money, war, and freedom. 🔗 Watch the full interview here. https://youtu.be/ZVTV3VRbI_o "Everybody needs more bitcoin this month than the previous month." - Simon Dixon image
2025-11-02 21:04:08 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System (Sort Of) Or: The Day Baba Tried to Explain Satoshi's White Paper to Adam and Layla By Adam, Age 14 (Digital Money Expert) So, picture this: a Tuesday evening. Baba came home with this look on his face. Not the "someone ate my last samosa" look, but the "I'm about to teach you something important" look. "Kids," he announced, setting down his briefcase. "Today we're going to read a very special document." "Is it about video games?" I asked hopefully. "Is it a permission slip for unlimited screen time?" Layla added. "Better," Baba said, pulling out his laptop. "It's the Bitcoin Whitepaper." Layla and I exchanged glances. Muezza meowed from under the table, which I'm pretty sure was cat-language for "this sounds boring." Page 1: The Problem (Or: Why Banks Are Like That One Kid Who Has to Be in the Middle of Everything) "Okay," Baba began, "imagine you want to send money to your cousin Zahra in another country." "Easy!" I said. "I'll just hand her the money." "She lives in Malaysia, Adam," Mama said, not looking up from her cooking. "Oh. Right. So... I'll mail it?" "What if it gets lost?" Layla asked. "Or stolen? Or what if Muezza somehow mails herself instead?" We all looked at Muezza, who was currently trying to fit inside a box half her size. Fair point. "Exactly," Baba said. "So normally, you'd use a bank. But here's the problem Satoshi Nakamoto—" "Who?" I interrupted. "The mysterious person who invented Bitcoin. No one knows who they really are. Could be one person, could be a group, could be an alien." "Definitely an alien," I muttered. Layla rolled her eyes. She's been perfecting that move since she was, like, five. "Anyway," Baba continued, "Satoshi noticed that when you send money through banks, they act as the middleman. They have to verify that you actually have the money, that you're not trying to spend the same money twice—" "Why would anyone do that?" I asked. "Because humans are creative in terrible ways," Mama called from the kitchen. "Now pay attention." Page 2: The Solution (Or: What If We Could All Just... Agree?) "So here's Satoshi's big idea," Baba said, getting excited. He always does this finger-tent thing when he's about to explain something he thinks is cool. "What if, instead of trusting ONE bank to keep track of everyone's money, we had EVERYONE keep track of EVERYONE's money?" There was a pause. "That sounds exhausting," Layla said. "That sounds AWESOME," I said. "It's like... a group project for money!" "Adam, you hate group projects," Layla reminded me. "I know, but this is different! This is group projects with... mathematics!" Baba laughed. "Exactly! Satoshi created something called a 'blockchain.' Think of it like a notebook that everyone has a copy of." "Why is it called a blockchain?" I asked. "Because information is stored in 'blocks,' and they're linked together in a 'chain,'" Mama explained, bringing over a tray of tea. "See? Block. Chain. Our ancestors were very literal people." Page 3: The Transactions (Or: How to Send Money Without Actually Sending Money) "Here's how it works," Baba said, drawing on a piece of paper. "When you want to send Bitcoin to someone, you announce it to everyone on the network." "EVERYONE?!" Layla gasped. "That's so embarrassing! What if I want to buy something weird?" "They don't know it's YOU-you," Baba explained. "You have a digital address, kind of like a username. So instead of 'Layla sent 1 Bitcoin to Adam,' it says something like 'XK893FJ sent 1 Bitcoin to QR473NM.'" "Oh, so it's like having a spy code name!" I said. "I want mine to be ThunderBolt3000." "That's not how it works, sweetie," Mama said gently. "It's random numbers and letters." "ThunderBolt3000 is cooler," I insisted. Page 4: The Timestamp Server (Or: Proof That You Did the Thing at the Time You Said You Did the Thing) "Now," Baba continued, "the whitepaper talks about something called a 'timestamp server.' It's basically a way to prove that a transaction happened at a specific time." "Why does that matter?" Layla asked. "Because," Baba said, using his teaching voice, "what if someone tries to spend the same Bitcoin twice? Like, they send it to you, but ALSO send it to someone else at the same time?" "That's cheating!" I exclaimed. "Exactly. So the timestamp server helps everyone agree on which transaction came first. It's like when you and Layla both claim you called dibs on the last piece of cake—" "I ALWAYS call it first," I interrupted. "You do NOT," Layla shot back. "—and we check the security camera to see who actually said it first," Mama finished. "We have security cameras?" I asked. "No, Adam. It was a metaphor." Page 5: Proof-of-Work (Or: Why Bitcoin Miners Aren't Actually Mining) "This is where it gets interesting," Baba said. "To add transactions to the blockchain, people called 'miners' have to solve really difficult maths puzzles." "Wait," I said. "I thought miners went underground and dug for gold or diamonds or whatever." "Different kind of mining," Mama explained. "These miners use powerful computers to solve complex mathematical problems. When they solve one, they get to add a new block of transactions to the chain." "And they get paid Bitcoin for doing it!" Baba added. "So let me get this straight," Layla said slowly. "People use powerful computers to solve maths problems that don't actually DO anything except prove they solved math problems, and they get paid for it?" "Well, when you put it THAT way..." Baba trailed off. "But it DOES do something," Mama said. "It keeps the network secure. The maths problems are so hard that it would take too much time and electricity to cheat the system." "Ohhhh," I said, even though I only sort of understood. "So it's like... really expensive homework?" "Sure, Adam," Baba sighed. "Really expensive homework." Page 6: The Network (Or: Democracy, But Make It Maths) "The network has a simple rule," Baba continued. "The longest chain wins." "Like Rapunzel?" I asked. Everyone stared at me. "What? She had the longest chain of... hair. Okay, forget it." Baba cleared his throat. "What I mean is, if there's ever a disagreement about which version of the blockchain is correct, the network accepts whichever chain has the most work put into it—usually the longest one." "So if 51% of the computers agree on something, that becomes the truth?" Layla asked. "Basically, yes." "That seems... problematic," she said. "It can be," Mama agreed. "That's why it's important that no single person or group controls more than 50% of the mining power. Otherwise, they could manipulate the system." "Hypothetically," Baba added quickly, seeing our worried faces, "it would be extremely expensive and difficult to do." Page 7: Privacy (Or: Everyone Knows Your Business, But They Don't Know It's YOUR Business) "Now, about privacy," Baba said. "Remember how I said transactions use random addresses instead of names?" We nodded. "That means the blockchain is completely public—anyone can see every transaction that's ever happened—but they can't necessarily tell who made them." "Like a mask!" I said. "You can see me running around, but you can't see my face!" "If you're running around in a mask, we have other problems," Mama muttered. "But," Layla said thoughtfully, "couldn't someone figure out who you are by looking at patterns? Like, if they know you bought something at one place, and then see a payment from that address to another address, couldn't they follow the trail?" Baba looked impressed. "That's very perceptive, Layla. Yes, it's possible with enough detective work. That's why the whitepaper recommends using a new address for every transaction." "So it's more like... privacy-ISH," I said. "Privacy-ish," Baba agreed. Page 8: The Calculations (Or: The Part Where Adam's Eyes Glazed Over) "Now," Baba said, "there's a whole section about the mathematical probability of an attacker being able to—" "BABA," I interrupted. "Do we REALLY need to know the math?" "The whitepaper includes formulas about hash rates and proof-of-work chains and—" "BABA." He sighed. "Fine. The short version: Math makes Bitcoin secure. Very complicated math." "I could've told you that an hour ago," Layla said. Page 9: Conclusion (Or: What Did We Just Learn?) Mama sat down with us, tea in hand. "So, what do you think? Do you understand what Satoshi was trying to do?" "I think," I said slowly, "that Satoshi wanted to create money that no one person controlled. Like, instead of banks being in charge, everyone is kind of in charge together." "And the blockchain is like a shared notebook," Layla added, "where everyone can see what's written, but it's really hard to cheat because you'd have to outwork everyone else." "And miners solve math problems to add new pages to the notebook," I continued, "and they get paid Bitcoin for their trouble." "And it's all transparent but also kind of private," Layla finished, "which is confusing but cool." Baba beamed at us. "That's exactly right!" "But Baba," I asked, "is Bitcoin... halal?" He smiled. "Well, Adam, that's a different conversation. But understanding how it works is the first step." Muezza chose that moment to jump onto the table, knocking over Baba's carefully drawn diagrams. "Muezza!" we all shouted. He just stared at us with his big green eyes, probably thinking about how silly humans are with their digital money and complicated maths problems. And you know what? Maybe he had a point. The End (Or: The Beginning of Many More Questions About Bitcoin That Baba Would Have to Answer) 👉 Find out more in BITCOIN IS HALAL! Bitcoin is Halal (English 🇬🇧): 📚Amazon (paperback): https://amzn.eu/d/7G7lNQb 📱Google Play (ebook): https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=qjxlEQAAQBAJ Bitcoin itu Halal (Bahasa Indonesia 🇮🇩): 📱 Google Play (ebook): https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=bqtyEQAAQBAJ 📚 Bukunesia (paperback): https://bukunesiastore.com/shop/buku-bitcoin-itu-halal-adam-dan-laila-menemukan-emas-digital-bitcoin-is-halal-adam-and-layla-discover-digital-gold/ Or from here: https://shopee.co.id/Bukunesia-Buku-Bitcoin-itu-Halal-Adam-dan-Laila-Menemukan-Emas-Digital-i.717921939.43673317510 Arabic translation coming soon! البيتكوين حلال 🇧🇦 Bosnian translation starting soon! 🎙️Audiobook is currently in development. Thank you!🙏 🌐 More details on www.ashikusmanbooks.com #BitcoinIsHalal #DigitalLiteracy #BitcoinForKids #BitcoinEducation #BitcoinWhitePaperDay image
2025-11-01 00:58:39 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
2025-10-27 16:04:52 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Artificial Intelligence is no longer a sci-fi fantasy; it’s a daily reality. It powers the search results for your child’s homework, recommends the next family movie, and is already transforming industries from medicine to farming. This incredible technology promises a future of unprecedented innovation. Yet, it also brings a wave of complex questions: How do we guard against algorithmic bias? What does a world with deepfakes mean for truth? And how will AI reshape the jobs our children will one day seek? For parents and educators, starting this conversation can feel daunting. How do you explain a Neural Network to a teenager? How do you discuss AI ethics in a way that’s engaging, not alarming? This is the challenge we set out to solve with “The Robots Are Alive! Adam and Layla Demystify AI.” Following the success of “Bitcoin Is Halal,” this new book invites your family back into the lively home of Adam, a 14-year-old tech enthusiast, and his sharp, artistic sister, Layla. When their smart speaker hilariously misunderstands a simple request, it sparks a family-wide adventure to figure out what AI really is. This isn’t a dry textbook. It’s a story. Through the characters’ witty dialogue, funny mishaps (involving a cat-ninja and a wise tortoise), and patient guidance from their parents, complex topics become simple. Readers will effortlessly learn about: - Machine Learning through the analogy of a baby learning to recognise a cat. - Neural Networks as a “team of detectives” or a “stack of pancakes.” - Real-world applications, from helping doctors in hospitals to aiding farmers in Bangladesh. “The Robots Are Alive!” is designed to be a shared experience. With “Adam’s Brain Blasts,” “Layla’s But Whyyy?” boxes, and end-of-part family discussion questions, it provides the perfect launchpad for one of the most important conversations you can have with your children today. It’s a book about preparing them not just to be consumers of future technology, but to be its thoughtful, critical, and ethical shapers. The future is arriving faster than ever. Isn’t it time your family started talking about it? 📘 Available now on Amazon and Google Play  👉 Amazon (paperback): http://bit.ly/47lxNLS 👉 Google Play (ebook): http://bit.ly/4qiAaHR ⭐️ More info at ashikusmanbooks.com
2025-10-27 08:26:57 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
The Law of Focus "I focus on one thing and one thing only - that's trying to stack as many sats as I can" image
2025-10-25 17:31:57 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
How can we equip the next generation with an understanding of emerging financial technologies like #Bitcoin, while staying true to our faith values? "BITCOIN IS HALAL" offers a unique solution, presenting complex topics in an accessible and engaging format for young readers. A valuable tool for sparking important conversations about money, technology, and faith in your home or classroom. 👉 Get your copy of BITCOIN IS HALAL now. Bitcoin is Halal (English 🇬🇧): 📚 Amazon: https://amzn.eu/d/7G7lNQb 📱 Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=qjxlEQAAQBAJ Bitcoin itu Halal (Bahasa Indonesia 🇮🇩): 📱 Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=bqtyEQAAQBAJ 📚 Bukunesia (paperback): https://bukunesiastore.com/shop/buku-bitcoin-itu-halal-adam-dan-laila-menemukan-emas-digital-bitcoin-is-halal-adam-and-layla-discover-digital-gold/ Or from here: https://shopee.co.id/Bukunesia-Buku-Bitcoin-itu-Halal-Adam-dan-Laila-Menemukan-Emas-Digital-i.717921939.43673317510 Arabic translation coming soon! البيتكوين حلال 🎙️Audiobook is currently in development. Thank you!🙏 🌐 More details on www.ashikusmanbooks.com #BitcoinIsHalal #DigitalLiteracy #BitcoinForKids #BitcoinEducation image image image
2025-10-25 15:57:43 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Lightning is the transport layer that connects everything. It moves bitcoin between the base layer and the Layer 3 systems. Cashu and Fedimint use Lightning for deposits/withdrawals while providing different custody models (single mint vs. distributed) and privacy guarantees (maximum anonymity vs. high privacy). image
2025-10-24 21:43:49 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Why Your Kids Need to Understand AI (And Why This Book Finally Gets it Right) In a world drowning in AI hype and fearmongering, this book does something remarkable: it makes AI understandable, ethical, and actually exciting for the next generation. Let’s be honest—most AI books for young people fall into two camps: either they’re so technical that eyes glaze over by page three, or they’re so simplified that they’re basically useless. While most AI books start with Alan Turing, this one takes us back to the Golden Age of Islamic Civilisation (8th-14th centuries). We meet Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi—yes, the person who gave us the word “algorithm”—and Al-Jazari, who built sophisticated automatons centuries before modern robotics. This isn’t just interesting trivia. It’s a powerful reminder that innovation has always been global, collaborative, and built on diverse foundations. In an era where we’re racing to deploy AI everywhere, The Robots Are Alive! anchors the conversation in timeless ethical principles. Drawing from Islamic values—truthfulness (Sidq), justice (Adl), stewardship (Istikhlaf), and seeking benefit while avoiding harm—the authors create a moral framework that applies whether you’re Muslim or not. The message is clear: AI isn’t coming—it’s here. The question is whether our kids will shape it or be shaped by it. The kids reading this book today will be the ones deciding how AI integrates into society tomorrow. They’ll be the policymakers, the engineers, the ethicists, and the users. They need more than fear. They need more than hype. They need understanding, ethical grounding, and the confidence to engage with AI critically and creatively. The Robots Are Alive! delivers exactly that. The Robots Are Alive! Adam and Layla Demystify AI is available now. Whether you’re a parent, educator, or just someone who cares about the next generation’s relationship with technology—this is the book they need to read. Because the best way to prepare for the future is to understand it. https://open.substack.com/pub/blockchainology/p/why-your-kids-need-to-understand image image image image image image
2025-10-21 18:03:33 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Those who know, know. image
2025-10-21 08:52:04 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
My Kid Won’t Read a Textbook on AI (And Now They Don’t Have To) Let’s face it—terms like “Machine Learning” and “Neural Networks” don’t exactly scream fun. But what if your child could laugh, learn, and love exploring AI? 📚 You don’t hand them a textbook. You hand them a story. Introducing The Robots Are Alive! Adam and Layla Demystify AI—a fast-paced, funny family adventure that sneaks in a full introduction to Artificial Intelligence. ✨ Why it works: - Relatable characters: Adam dreams of robot butlers. Layla just wants the smart speaker to behave. - Humour & heart: From a ninja cat to a wise tortoise, learning is wrapped in chaos and charm. - Brilliant analogies: Neural networks = pancake stacks. Generative AI = imagination machines. - Smart format: Brain Blasts, “But Whyyy?” boxes, illustrations, and chapter recaps keep it engaging. 🤖 By the final page, your child will be decoding deepfakes, debating ethics, and connecting ancient history to modern code. Stop forcing the textbook. Start the adventure. 📘 Available now on Amazon and Google Play 👉 Amazon (paperback) 👉 Google Play (ebook) ⭐️ More at ashikusmanbooks.com #ArtificialIntelligence #ResponsibleAI #EthicalAI #NewBook image image image image
2025-10-21 00:12:04 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →
Publishing soon. insha'Allah 🤲 image image
2025-10-18 21:37:06 from 1 relay(s) View Thread →