NeverVoteOnDAO

vip
Age 8.8 Year
Peak Tier 4
Holds governance tokens from 24 DAOs but has never voted once. Always complaining about protocol decisions despite refusing to participate. Expert in theoretical governance improvements.
Recently, while reviewing materials, I was reminded of Hal Finney. Many people know about Bitcoin, but few truly understand the stories of its early participants.
Hal Finney was a very interesting figure. Born in California in 1956, he was fascinated by technology from a young age. After graduating from Caltech in 1979, he initially worked in the gaming industry, participating in the development of some classic games. But his true passion was in cryptography. He was an early participant in the Cypherpunk movement, a group that gathered to use encryption technology to protect privacy and freedo
BTC2.85%
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Something quite significant is happening these days between the USA and Iran, and frankly the crypto market should not ignore it. Pakistani mediators are pushing for Tehran to submit a revised peace counterproposal by Tuesday or at the latest Friday, according to CNN reports on April 29. All this is happening as diplomatic efforts enter a critical window, with all parties signaling increasingly thin patience.
The situation is more complicated than it appears on the surface. Trump has already rejected a previous version of the Iranian proposal, so now Iran must return to the table with somethin
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You know what's wild? Watching someone go from posting comedy skits online to becoming one of the most financially successful streamers in the world. That's basically Kai Cenat's story, and honestly, it's a pretty solid case study in how the creator economy actually works in 2026.
Kai Carlo Cenat III started out pretty normal for a Bronx kid born back in 2001. Facebook skits, Instagram videos, the usual social media grind that most people never turn into anything real. But somewhere along the way, he figured out how to actually build an audience. YouTube happened, then Twitch, and suddenly thi
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I've been following Taylor Swift's financial trajectory, and honestly, the numbers are absolutely wild. We're talking about someone who's not just a pop icon but essentially a business empire disguised as a recording artist. Her net worth in 2025 hit $1.6 billion, making her the wealthiest female musician ever—and that's not hype, that's verified across multiple sources.
What blows my mind is how she actually got there. This isn't some influencer who pivoted to a makeup line or a musician banking on endorsement deals. Taylor Swift net worth 2025 is built almost entirely on music and the ecosys
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Been thinking about this more lately - if you're getting into crypto and haven't really wrapped your head around EVM wallets yet, now's probably a good time to understand what's going on.
So basically an EVM wallet is your gateway to the entire Ethereum ecosystem and everything built on compatible chains. It's not just about holding ETH and tokens - it's the tool that lets you actually do things in this space. MetaMask is probably the most obvious example, just a browser extension most people start with. Trust Wallet is another solid option if you prefer mobile-first. Both handle your private
ETH2.25%
UNI1.72%
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Just hit 25k in savings and honestly it felt like a huge win at first. Then I realized that's only like 3 months of expenses if you make decent money, so the real work starts now.
Here's what I've learned about what to do with 25k that actually matters:
First thing - put it in perspective. Yeah it's solid, but it's not a license to spend recklessly. If you're making 100k a year, that's basically your emergency fund. Financial advisors say you need 3-6 months of living expenses set aside, so depending on your situation, a lot of that money might already be spoken for.
But if you do have breathi
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Ever catch yourself sabotaging your own progress right when you're about to make a breakthrough? I used to do this constantly and couldn't figure out why. Turns out, what looked like self-sabotaging behavior wasn't actually about being lazy or self-destructive. It was my mind trying to protect me.
Here's what I realized about self-sabotage: it's not some random thing that happens to us. It's actually a pretty deliberate pattern where we undermine our own efforts, even when we genuinely want to succeed. The crazy part? We know we're doing it, but we can't seem to stop.
The root usually comes do
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Just spotted some interesting option setups worth breaking down if you're into this kind of thing. Been looking at HII options expiring mid-September and there's decent premium available because of the time value with that far out expiration. The put side caught my attention first. There's a 400 strike put trading around 49 bucks, which means if you sold it you'd be buying HII shares at 400 instead of the current 407 level. After collecting that premium your actual cost basis drops to 351. Not bad if you were already thinking about accumulating HII stock anyway. The math on it is interesting t
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Just noticed something interesting with LITE - analysts have been significantly more bullish lately. The average price target jumped to $565.29, which is a pretty substantial 55.75% bump from where they had it back in early February. That said, the range is pretty wide right now, with estimates swinging from $385 all the way up to $945 per share, so there's clearly some debate in the analyst community.
What caught my eye though is the institutional activity around LITE. There's been some real shuffling in the holdings - we're now seeing over 1,000 funds with positions in the company, and that
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Just been looking into Arista's networking switch strategy, and there's some interesting momentum building here. The company's really positioned itself well in the high-performance data center space where cloud and AI workloads are exploding.
Their flagship lineup - the 7000 and 7800 Series - are solid plays for hyperscale environments. We're talking ultra-low latency, 400G to 800G Ethernet speeds, which is exactly what you need when you're running modern AI infrastructure. They've also got the newer R4 Series gaining real traction, including those 800 GbE platforms. The rugged 710HXP switches
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Been noticing something interesting lately - when top directors start dropping serious cash into their own company stock, that's usually worth paying attention to. Like, why would they do that unless they genuinely believe things are heading in a good direction, right?
So I came across this: Ivan Kaufman, who's the COB, CEO and President at Arbor Realty Trust (ABR), just picked up 54,000 shares back in November at $8.69 per share - that's nearly half a million dollars committed to the stock. When top directors make moves like that, it tends to signal some confidence in the company.
Here's the
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Been watching Palantir's recent moves pretty closely, and there's something worth discussing here. Their Q4 results came in hot, and the commercial growth in the U.S. is actually accelerating in a way that caught a lot of people's attention. The kind of momentum that could supercharge their trajectory if it sustains.
What's interesting is how the numbers are stacking up. Revenue acceleration combined with expanding margins and that massive backlog they're sitting on - it's the kind of setup that makes you wonder if the current valuation premium actually has legs. I'm not saying it's a slam dun
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been seeing a lot of people asking whether is college worth the cost these days, and honestly it's way more complicated than the guidance counselors make it sound. so i spent some time digging into the actual numbers because the answer really depends on your situation.
first, let's talk about the price tag because yeah, sticker shock is real. public universities are running about $27k per year for in-state students, private schools are closer to $55k annually. four years of that adds up to somewhere between $107k and $220k depending on where you go. that's before you factor in living expenses
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So here's something worth thinking about - Netflix actually might've come out ahead by NOT winning the Warner Bros Discovery bid. Sounds backwards, right? But hear me out.
When Paramount Skydance grabbed the Warner Bros deal earlier this year, a lot of people assumed Netflix lost. But if you step back and look at what Netflix would've been taking on, the picture gets more interesting. Sometimes the best deal is the one you don't do.
There's this old wisdom in business - the brothers in any industry know that not every opportunity is worth chasing. Netflix clearly understood the financial and o
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Just noticed Maple Leaf Foods posted solid Q4 results. Net earnings hit C$391 million with EPS at C$3.14, which is a massive jump from last year's C$54 million. The adjusted EBITDA came in at C$117 million, up 8.3% year-over-year, and they managed to grow sales to C$991 million from C$917 million.
What caught my eye is the adjusted EPS more than doubled to C$0.32 from C$0.18. Revenue growth of 8.1% isn't crazy but solid for a food company in this environment. For next year, management is guiding for mid-single-digit revenue growth with adjusted EBITDA expected around C$520-540 million range.
S
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Just spotted something interesting in the distribution space that caught my attention. Arrow Electronics (ARW) has been flying under the radar for a lot of investors, but the fundamentals are worth a closer look right now.
The company is basically one of the largest electronics component distributors globally, handling everything from components to enterprise computing products. What that arrow symbol really represents in market terms is a solid, unsexy business that actually prints money. Not the flashy growth story everyone chases, but the kind of play that quietly outperforms.
Here's what's
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I've been watching Super Micro's chart lately, and there's something interesting happening that most people are missing. While NVIDIA just crushed earnings and everyone celebrated the AI boom being real, Super Micro's stock barely moved. It's sitting around that $30 level, consolidating quietly. But here's what caught my attention: the company is shipping more hardware than ever, yet the market's treating it like something's wrong.
Let me break down what's actually going on. The way I see it, NVIDIA builds the brains of AI infrastructure, but Super Micro builds the bodies. You can't run those
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Just ran the numbers on what it actually costs to live in New York City without constantly stressing about money, and honestly the figures are wild. If you're thinking about moving here or already living here trying to figure out your budget, the cost of living in new york city is way higher than most people expect going into it.
Let me break down what I found. Rent alone is eating up a huge chunk - we're talking $2,367 for a one-bedroom and $2,496 for a two-bedroom as the median. Some places are pushing $8,000 a month though. If you're trying to buy instead, Manhattan apartments are running $
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Just caught wind of something pretty significant in the medical imaging space. GE HealthCare just inked a massive 10-year partnership with UCSF Health, and this isn't just another vendor agreement—it's a full-scale enterprise alliance that could reshape how advanced imaging gets deployed across a major academic health system.
What's interesting here is the scope. We're talking about three major pillars: ramping up radiologic technologist training, pushing magnetic resonance excellence, and expanding remote scanning capabilities. UCSF is literally building two next-gen facilities right now—a ne
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Got an IRS notice in the mail? Yeah, that sinking feeling is real. But here's what I figured out after dealing with this myself - an IRS tax audit isn't the financial apocalypse most people think it is.
First thing: don't freak out. Seriously. An audit is just the IRS double-checking that you reported your income correctly and claimed only legit deductions. If your numbers are straight, you might walk away owing nothing. Some people actually get refunds.
The tricky part is understanding what kind of audit you're actually dealing with. Most people imagine some intimidating agent showing up at t
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