“The desire of people in the industry for banks to help pump their bags is way bigger than their desire to pave a way for freedom tech in general.”
View quoted note →
The plot thickens:
This is a water heater for home central heating. It has a Whatsminer inside.
The company is called HeatCore and I was told this goes for under US$3000.
This is a very acceptable price for a home water boiler that is also a retirement fund.
#bitcoinasia
“If a saver had any hope of keeping up with inflation, it became necessary to deposit money in banks and collect interest. Bank deposits underperformed inflation from 1913 to the present, but at least underperformed less than holding physical banknotes that paid no interest. Therefore, this structurally inflationary system enhanced the power of banks by making them more necessary for everyone to deposit the bulk of their savings with. It also increased the power of the government to surveil account balances and transactions, collect taxes, and freeze funds on demand, since most of the money was in the banks rather than in the form of physical and private bearer assets. Put simply, an inflationary money necessitates the use of counterparties and leverage to try to keep up with inflation by earning interest, which is not the case with a hard money.”
Lyn Alden, Broken Money
Beautiful drone view of a new Gridless operation in Kenya.
Water is diverted out of the river from a small dam and goes through a buried canal towards 3 turbines a few hundred meters downstream.
This is how they extract 150kw out of a small river and provide electricity to the communities nearby.
And this is partly financed by busy little ASICs hidden inside green sheds.
The most salient:
1. Details about a Gridless hydro operation in Bondo, Malawi. Capex vs opex funding.
2. Opportunities of geothermal mining in Malawi.
3. the recent situation in Malawi: 2023 devaluation of the local currency.
Still reading it...
Will add to my collection of references:
https://099244.wixsite.com/mysite
Gresham’s law: people tend to spend weaker money and hoard the harder money.
➡️ Therefore the harder money is not much used as a means of payment. However it is used for savings.
Thiers’ law: at one point, weaker money is losing its purchasing power so fast that merchants stop accepting it and prefer being paid with harder money.
➡️ Harder money then replaces weaker money as a means of payment.
A quote that struck me while listening to Audible last night:
"People have historically been willing to deal with weak money if it’s faster than gold, but if weak money doesn’t even have a speed advantage relative to harder money alternatives, then in a world of widely accepted bitcoin it would likely become harder for governments to convince their people to accept fiat currencies for payment and hold large amounts of value in them.
Gresham’s law dominates until the weaker money is basically useless. At that point, Thiers’ law takes over, which observes that good money drives out bad money.
A payee generally wants to pay for goods with weaker money, and a merchant generally wants to sell their goods for stronger money.
If a weaker money gets bad enough that merchants won’t even accept it, that is when Gresham’s law gives over to Thiers’ law. ”
Broken Money
Lyn Alden