Digital_archaeologist

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Just caught up on what happened in markets this week and it's pretty rough out there. The major indices got hit hard with stocks fall across the board - S&P 500 down 1.3%, Nasdaq 100 down nearly 1.5%, and it's been the worst week in a minute. Tech stocks were the main casualty with Qualcomm leading the selloff after missing revenue guidance, and Alphabet also getting hammered over those massive capex plans for 2026.
What's really spooking people is the labor market data. Job cuts jumped 117% year-over-year in January, initial unemployment claims spiked higher than expected to an 8-week high, a
BTC-2,43%
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just realized elon musk is actually 188cm which is legit tall, but then you see his brother kimbal next to him at 193cm and suddenly elon looks average lol. in their family pics kimbal just towers over everyone, it's actually hilarious how much of a height difference there is. how tall is elon musk compared to his family? apparently way shorter than his younger brother 😅 genetics are wild
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Tonight it occurred to me: how many of you really know the difference between APR and APY? I myself was confused about these two terms for quite a while before understanding how they actually work. Let’s find out together.
Let’s start with APR, the annual percentage rate. It’s the simplest concept of the two. Essentially, APR tells you how much interest you will pay or earn in a year, calculated only on the initial principal. Nothing complicated: it’s simple, straightforward interest. You often see it with credit cards, consumer loans, and mortgages. If you borrow 1000 euros with an APR of 5%,
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Who doesn't know this — standing in front of a decision and just not sure how to proceed. In the past, people would simply flip a coin and accept the result. Today, that can also be done digitally, and honestly, it's often more convenient than you might think.
The interesting thing about coin flips is that they work completely unbiased. Whether you need to choose between two options, settle a bet, or just need a quick decision — a coin flip raises no questions. That’s why this method has worked for centuries and remains relevant today.
With the internet came the logical consequence: digital co
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So I've been diving into the NFT market history lately, and honestly, some of the prices people have paid for digital art are absolutely wild. Let me walk you through the most expensive NFT ever sold and what makes these pieces so valuable in the first place.
First up is Pak's The Merge - and this one's genuinely the highest-priced NFT in history at $91.8 million back in December 2021. What's interesting is how it actually works. Instead of one collector owning it, nearly 29,000 people bought different quantities of it. Each unit cost around $575, and the more you purchased, the larger your sh
ETH-4,41%
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Been seeing a lot of traders talking about the adam eve pattern lately, and honestly it's one of those reversal setups that actually works if you know what you're looking for.
So here's the thing - the adam eve pattern shows up in both bull and bear markets. You get two peaks or two valleys that are similar in structure, but one is always slightly higher or lower than the other. The first peak (Adam) sits higher than the second (Eve), and the first valley (Eve) dips lower than the second valley (Adam). Thomas Bulkowski actually documented this pretty thoroughly in his chart patterns encycloped
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So apparently there's this mining company Geosyn that got caught in a pretty wild situation. The CEO Caleb Ward and two other execs including Jeremy McNutt were hit with criminal charges for basically stealing customer money instead of buying mining equipment. They were running what looks like a classic Ponzi scheme - taking money from new investors to pay old ones while lying about profits. Jeremy McNutt and his brother Jared both bounced from the company back in 2022, but the SEC still came after them for falsifying records and misleading investors. A Texas judge just postponed the lawsuit a
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Been diving deep into NFT history lately, and honestly the price tags on some of these digital pieces are absolutely wild. Let me break down what the world's most expensive NFTs actually tell us about this market.
Pak's The Merge sits at the absolute top with $91.8 million, which is insane when you think about it. But here's the thing that makes it different from most records—it wasn't bought by one collector. Instead, 28,893 people pooled together and purchased 312,686 units at $575 each. The genius part? The more units you owned, the larger your stake in the final artwork. It's basically a n
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Just stumbled upon something interesting about UK Prime Ministers and their wealth over time. The contrast is pretty wild when you look at how their net worth changed before and after they held office. Some barely moved the needle financially, while others saw dramatic increases. Take Gordon Brown for example - his net worth went from around 2 million to 5 million, which is notable but nowhere near some of the bigger jumps. Then you've got cases like Tony Blair jumping from 1 million to 70 million, or Margaret Thatcher going from 10 million to 60 million. Even more extreme is David Cameron, wh
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I was just thinking about Macaulay Culkin again and how his enormous wealth destroyed his entire family. Crazy how quickly everything can go off the rails when money comes into play.
So, at first, it was all harmless. In Home Alone, he only got $100,000, but the movie made over $476 million worldwide. For the sequel, he was already negotiating around $4.5 million per film. By age 12, he was wealthier than his parents — a crazy situation.
The problem was his father, Kit. As soon as Macaulay became successful in the '80s, the old man quit his job and became his manager. And from there, it got da
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Have you ever found yourself in a situation where you simply couldn't decide what to do? That's where the classic coin toss comes into play. The crazy thing is: today, you don't even need an actual coin for that. With a good online coin flip tool, you can do it conveniently from your phone.
The internet is full of these simulators. Google even has a built-in feature—just type "flip a coin" and you'll get your result. But there are also specialized platforms like FlipSim or JustFlipACoin that offer even more features. Some even allow you to flip the coin 100 times or more if you're into statist
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Ever wondered what is nonce and why it's such a big deal in crypto mining? Let me break this down because it's actually pretty fascinating once you get it.
So nonce stands for "number used once" - pretty straightforward name actually. It's basically a random number that gets used exactly once in a cryptographic transaction. Think of it as a unique fingerprint added to each block that prevents miners from gaming the system.
Here's where it gets interesting. When miners are working on a block, they take transaction data and attach this random nonce to it. Then they hash everything together using
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I've been following Ran Neuner's story for a while now, and honestly, it's one of the most sobering case studies in crypto investing you'll come across. The guy went from being celebrated as South Africa's youngest CEO of a public company to losing over $100 million in a matter of time. His net worth took an absolute nosedive, and the way he's been open about it is actually refreshing.
Here's what fascinates me about his journey: it's not just about the money. In 2020, Neuner hit a wall hard. He describes it as one of the darkest periods of his life—not clinical depression, but what he calls a
LUNA-5,28%
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Lately, I've been spending a lot of time exploring different ways to earn money with cryptocurrencies without large investments. I came across an article about cryptocurrency mining apps, and I have to admit – it's a more interesting option than I expected.
Until recently, I thought Bitcoin mining was something only for those with professional equipment and huge budgets. But it turns out that thanks to mobile apps, anyone can give it a try. Mainly, instead of buying expensive hardware, you can rent computing power or let your phone work in the background.
What caught my interest? Primarily, ac
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Just realized we're now a year past Satoshi Nakamoto's 50th birthday milestone - if you go by the April 5, 1975 date he listed on his P2P Foundation profile. Wild to think about it: the mysterious architect behind Bitcoin would be 51 now, yet his identity remains one of the internet's greatest unsolved puzzles.
What's fascinating is the symbolism baked into everything. That birth date? April 5, 1933 was when the U.S. government banned private gold ownership through Executive Order 6102 to prop up the dollar. Exactly 42 years later, Satoshi lists his birthday as April 5, 1975. And here's the ki
BTC-2,43%
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Today's AUD to MAD Price Update
This report analyzes the AUD/MAD exchange rate, highlighting a Strong Buy outlook due to bullish technical indicators. Traders are advised to watch for breakouts beyond current price ranges for potential opportunities.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
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I've been diving into how some of the greatest investors actually think about markets, and George Soros keeps coming up. What makes him interesting isn't just the money he's made—it's the completely different way he approaches trading, especially in futures markets.
Most traders look at price charts and economic data. Soros does something different. His reflexivity theory is basically saying that market participants' beliefs actually shape reality, creating feedback loops. So he's hunting for moments where what people think is completely disconnected from what's actually happening. That's wher
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Been diving into some interesting patterns in the limited supply cryptocurrency space lately. There's actually a solid group of projects with sub-20 million token supplies that are worth paying attention to if you're looking at real use cases beyond pure speculation.
Let me start with something that caught my eye—Quant (QNT). Total supply sitting around 14.88 million, which is genuinely scarce. What makes it interesting isn't just the limited supply though. The whole interoperability angle with enterprise networks like Hyperledger creates actual demand pressure. When institutions need to hold
QNT-3,34%
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Wait, Vitalik Buterin has a girlfriend now? 💖 That's actually kind of wholesome lol. Anyway, speaking of ETH, have you seen what's been happening with the price lately? People are saying it could hit new ATHs soon, and honestly the momentum does look pretty solid right now. The whole market seems to be in a good mood these days. Not sure if it's just hype or if there's actually something fundamental driving it, but either way it's hard to ignore. You guys think we're actually heading towards that 4.95K mark everyone keeps talking about? Would be crazy if Vitalik's personal life becoming publi
ETH-4,41%
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Just been going through some classic chart patterns and realized the Adam and Eve pattern doesn't get enough attention from retail traders. It's actually pretty solid for catching reversals.
So here's the thing - this pattern shows up when you've got two peaks or two valleys that form specific shapes. The first peak (Adam) sits higher than the second one (Eve), or the first valley dips lower than the second. Thomas Bulkowski documented this back in his pattern encyclopedia and found it has legit success rates for predicting when trends actually flip.
What makes the Adam and Eve pattern work is
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