Best AI video I've seen so far. Wow!
TheBitcoinBattery
TheBitcoinBattery@primal.net
npub1kl8a...q497
Bitcoin is going to fix everything. Don't worry, keep calm and stack sats. Don't understand why? Study markets, money, and history. Start here: Bit.ly/StudyBitcoin
So I've been wanting to use physical Cash instead of cards for any bills that don't accept BTC yet, but it is quite a headache for all involved given the 13 different denominations in circulation.
To solve this I believe I have figured out the most efficient Cash system, by reducing the denominations you use to only 6, allowing quick and easy exact change with no need to fumble with receiving anything back.
Simply carry with you:
* Paper denominations: $50, $20, $5.
* Coin denominations: $1, $0.25, $0.05.
The paper adds up to $420, a reasonable amount of buying power, in only 18 notes. And you can always withdraw extra $20s at an ATM whenever you need a top up. Also having only 3 note sizes means you don't have to search through your wallet for the right note: the back is $50s, the center is $20s, and the front is $5s, easy peasy.
While the 3 coins are visibly different in size or color from each other which makes selection from a single coin bag easy and fast.
Further, the beauty in the system is how simple it is:
$50: divides into 2 $20s and 2 $5s,
$20: divides into 4 $5s.
$5: divides into 5 $1s.
$1: divides into 4 $0.25.
$0.25: divides into 5 $0.05s.
Every step up of currency between $0.05 to $20 is either 4x or 5x. Very simple. While the $50 is able to be broken into the smaller units for more value density in a small amount of bills. Also, you very well might spend a $50 on a single bill and few places don't accept them unlike the $100. Since $20s are the bill likely used the most, it works well since that's the most common bill able to be withdrawn from ATMs when top ups are needed. ๐ค
If you don't understand fiat, you're fiat's bitch.
If you do understand fiat, fiat's your bitch.
The end.
๐ค
You don't need to start a podcast or write a book to make a difference, you can just spend more time with the people around you.
Since Bitcoin has given me my time back, I've helped family and friends learn about sound money and get started stacking. I've helped friends save money by babysitting their kids at no charge, visited family and helped them with housework, fix transportation issues, and was present when they needed someone.
Helping the world can mean helping a lot of people a little, or helping a few people a lot. They're both meaningful, but one is much more personal and strengthens relationships in your local community.
Bitcoin is just an IOU for time, and there's no better way to redeem it than for those you love.
Them: What do you do for work?
Me: Money.
Have y'all heard of Physical Bitcoin's?


Hey Nostridges, I updated my personal charts with the last few weeks of highs and lows which I'm attaching below. This time I'm also including more zoomed in charts with 1.05x and 0.95x the trend line showing how both the daily lows and highs relate to them over the last year. I think the charts speak for themselves, but if you have any questions I'm happy to answer to the best of my ability.
Unlike most chart makers I'm not a trader, and this is not an attempt to find a hard bottom or hard top. My intent is just to help visualize the long term growth pattern and what might occur if that growth continues. If you find this interesting that's cool, if you don't that's okay too. Don't use this as a basis for decisions to trade, just don't trade, stack and HODL.
If you're transitioning to actually living on Bitcoin and spending it to cover expenses, then if trends continue my calculations show you can safely withdraw 1 - 2% a month for living expenses and never run out of savings. The amount of Satoshi's you sell will go down each month as the value rises, eventually you'll be selling less than one Satoshi per month; this will be possible as IMO it is an inevitability that consensus will be found to divide Bitcoin beyond the Satoshi, within a decade. It is also likely to be done by adding lines of code that automatically increase division capacity in regular intervals, like perhaps at every halving. I'm not sure how it will play out exactly, but with a growth rate of 10x roughly every 3 years we're losing 1 decimal of value divisibility in the same time frame as long as we don't increase divisibility.
Bitcoin is a 1000+ year network, it will change in ways you don't expect. But you can live on it today, sustainably and forever.
#TheBitcoinBattery

