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Wow, reading your story made me smile from beginning to end.
How lucky your daughter is to have a dad and mom so patient to keep up with such brilliant questions.
Ese señor de las fotos parece todo un modelo… ¡hasta parece un doctor con esos guantes y bata! 😄
Mis recuerdos son un poco distintos… mi mamá me regañaba si me veía con un guarapo de papelón o un raspado, decía que me iba a enfermar con eso. Y yo, todo contestón, le respondía que eso más bien me ayudaba a activar las defensas. Jejeje.
Thank you for sharing this. You took me straight back in time...
Remembering my son at that stage makes me smile.
He's almost 10 now, and although that whirlwind of wild energy is behind him, I still hold those chaotic, intense, and loving days close to my heart.
The proposal is interesting; my personal opinion is that the key factor remains the specific need and the availability of liquidity. Each user has a different urgency, and most are looking for quick and functional solutions, not necessarily ideal or decentralized.
Today, companies like VISA and Mastercard are capitalizing on this demand with crypto-reloadable cards. They don't create new money; they simply offer an already established infrastructure with broad global acceptance. In my personal case, I liquidate sats for USDC and then top up a Cypher Card (VISA), which allows me to pay for goods and services frictionlessly. (Not what I wanted, but it's what I get.)
The same goes for family remittances: it's much more practical to exchange USDT for fiat on any P2P market than to look for a technical alternative that hasn't yet matured in terms of adoption or liquidity.
In short: liquidity follows the simplest and most direct path. As long as a solution like Cashu cards doesn't overcome that friction and offer the same ease of use, I don't think I, as a retailer, would pursue that alternative without any incentive.
Since I'm biased about my needs, I think I'd need to consult with more retailers about the idea.
Because of the color blue, because I reflect on the joy of children, that's how I feel when I play with the bitaxe, I've learned a little more about mining thanks to it.
They immediately removed me from my position and sent me straight to the personnel department. I waited there for about six months until they finally signed my resignation. I felt an enormous relief.
The next thing I did was leave the country and settle in another country. Since then, I've been busy every day resynchronizing a balance between living with dignity today, eating well, and remaining firm in my conviction to hold BTC for the long term.
I also resigned out of principle. I was working for a government, and one day I started studying Bitcoin, and that's when I understood the game of inflation and decided to no longer be employed there. I told my immediate superior that the problem of hyperinflation was strictly monetary: printing money and distributing unbacked bonds only fueled the disaster. They should find a way to stop this or stop creating money out of thin air.
Although at the time I wasn't entirely clear about my convictions about Bitcoin, and with some fear of possible retaliation, I still made the decision and submitted my resignation. I couldn't continue contributing to a system I no longer agreed with.
What a great idea, really. I hadn't realized how many hours a day I spend glued to YouTube until I read this. Thanks for sharing your approach; you've inspired me to rethink my own digital habits.
I actually updated miner.bin first and then www.bin. Once I saw everything was OK, I manually restarted the device.
Not sure if the order really matters, but that’s how I did it.
Glad you found it useful. Thanks for reading! ⚡🛠️