10 sats \ 1 reply \ @mrldotsh OP 17 Mar \ parent \ on: BitCan: DIY Bitcoin Seed Storage bitcoin
You could also make a local copy of the website („Save as PDF“) and store it in the cloud/send it to yourself via email.
Some options to make a back up of a simple website such as this one
They may be smart, but are they humble enough to listen to new ideas?
Or are they jerks about it and don’t really listen, „know“ all the answers already, etc.?
Plant seeds, yes.
But otherwise, I‘ll only be patient and explain everything from scratch if the person is humble and open enough.
Then, it’s not really arguing/defending your argument. It’s more like an explorative discussion where you both enjoy the conversation and time you spend together.
All the others may „buy Bitcoin at the price they deserve“.
I’d highly recommend getting familiar with the topic first, before actually sending a bigger stack of sats to a multi-sig wallet of your own!
(I mean, that’s why you here ^^)
Here’s a very good guide by one of the co-founders and creators of the BitBox02 hardware wallet.
All signers will be from the same vendor. Many will point out that this may be bad practice (danger of supply chain attacks), but there are good reasons for it! Especially in the case of BitBox02!
He uses Electrum, but it also works with SparrowWallet (which has a nicer UI, IMHO).
There’s also an in-depth article about some of the dangers of multi-sig (drawbacks if not set up correctly):
https://bitbox.swiss/blog/how-nearly-all-personal-hardware-wallet-multisig-setups-are-insecure/
Other highlights I forgot to mention:
- documentation is actually good 😄
- the community is awesome, very helpful and responsive
If you are curious to learn more and see Elixir in action, I can only recommend watching this fantastic talk:
„The Soul of Erlang and Elixir“ by Saša Jurić 🧡
Can agree to most if not all 👌
However, I‘d love for more devs having a decent look at Elixir.
It solves many of the tricky parts of writing maintainable code and systems in a functional language.
I think the process model does the trick.
Elixir also has a decent way for meta-programming.
You can write powerful functions and frameworks. Ash is a particularly good example.
Though, I‘m hoping meta-programming won’t lead to a mess in general.
As you described, it can scare away new programmers from Elixir (IMHO not just novice ones).
Any DSL introduces new terms and sometimes comes with a different meaning of an existing term.