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This machine takes around four seconds for each solve. To reach that speed I had to use the kociemba algorithm, which can find a solution of around 20 moves for all scrambles. It took me a really long time to complete this so I would appreciate it if you show it some love! I made this when I was around 15. Please ask questions! submitted by /u/Henry517 [link] [Kommentare]
Curious: how are you feeling about crypto compared to a few years ago? A. It’s the future, nothing changed B. I’m not so sure C. Yeah I’ve lost some enthusiasm D. It’s probably another symptom of late stage capitalism and they’re gonna screw us E. Other (explain) submitted by /u/nandofour-san [link] [Kommentare]
We’re down about 50% from the October highs, and my feed is packed with fear, doom, and “Bitcoin is dead” posts. So let’s zoom out for a second. Bitcoin is not going to zero. Why? Because as long as even one person somewhere in the world values it, they’ll trade something for it. Something that was worth pennies 16 years ago is sitting around $60,000 today… after being cut in half. Name another asset that can drop 50% and still be up that much over its lifetime. This is what Bitcoin does. It doesn’t move in a straight line. It climbs in violent, gut-wrenching waves with brutal pullbacks in between. Every major correction has felt like the end of the world while it was happening. Every single one. And yet here we are. The part critics never seem to address is this: Bitcoin’s supply gets tighter over time, while the supply of dollars keeps expanding. Every four years, Bitcoin’s issuance gets cut in half on a predetermined schedule, all the way toward its hard cap of 21 million coins. Fiat currencies work the opposite way. More gets created whenever policymakers decide it’s necessary. That’s not a conspiracy; it’s simply how the system is designed. Over time, assets with limited supply tend to rise relative to currencies that are continually being expanded. We’ve seen that play out in real estate, stocks, and many other scarce assets for decades. So no, the daily price action isn’t the story. Short-term markets are driven by emotions, headlines, liquidity, and uncertainty. Sometimes that sends prices higher. Sometimes it sends them lower. That’s the noise. The bigger picture is much simpler: a scarce asset, growing adoption over time, and a currency system that continues to expand. Zoom out. The long-term trend is what matters. submitted by /u/Vegetable-Acadia-766 [link] [Kommentare]
I were doing call to someone and then it showed the time. submitted by /u/Number_Z3r0 [link] [Kommentare]
I was gonna search up this one meme I saw, but then my search history just goes “me when I’m stuck in a mass extinction simulator” 3 times randomly, I have no memory of searching this by the way submitted by /u/Soft-Addition-5859 [link] [Kommentare]