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Exploring Life On Mars
“Three, Two, One, Expunge.” The lock releases, the lander detached from the spacecraft, heading toward Mars. It all started, when a mad scientist really think that a lighthouse is a great idea for planetary exploration. A floating fortress measuring 300 meters tall, with several arms stretching up to 45 meters, weighing barely 815 kg, it’s a beast of planetary exploration. It had been designed for lightweight and robustness, to last for a thousand years before breaking down. The more high-tec...

Books Don't Tell You Everything
Say, non-fictional books. Most popular being the self-help books, but there are others that contains transferrable information; others are very science-y, requiring deeper education to understand. Yet, if any of which, books don't tell you everything, and they sometimes clash with each other. It's a pain, as the devoted reader tries to take and follow whatever useful for his/her life from reading the book. Throughout the reading, information stays fresh within his/her brain; and it ...
Money and Crypto Both Fictitious. Why Not Crypto?
Yuval Noah Harari, in Sapiens, introduced that Gods, Mythology, Limited Liability Companies (like Boeing, Adidas, Tesla), and money (the dollar, euro, etc.) were fictitious entities that we made them up, and collectively believing in its value. Where we lose trust, they lose their value. If the gave and giving money value, those hard currency (gold, silver, and other metals), paper currency, and fiat; and crypto is also a virtual currency, why do we trust the former more than the latter? How ...
Exploring Life On Mars
“Three, Two, One, Expunge.” The lock releases, the lander detached from the spacecraft, heading toward Mars. It all started, when a mad scientist really think that a lighthouse is a great idea for planetary exploration. A floating fortress measuring 300 meters tall, with several arms stretching up to 45 meters, weighing barely 815 kg, it’s a beast of planetary exploration. It had been designed for lightweight and robustness, to last for a thousand years before breaking down. The more high-tec...

Books Don't Tell You Everything
Say, non-fictional books. Most popular being the self-help books, but there are others that contains transferrable information; others are very science-y, requiring deeper education to understand. Yet, if any of which, books don't tell you everything, and they sometimes clash with each other. It's a pain, as the devoted reader tries to take and follow whatever useful for his/her life from reading the book. Throughout the reading, information stays fresh within his/her brain; and it ...
Money and Crypto Both Fictitious. Why Not Crypto?
Yuval Noah Harari, in Sapiens, introduced that Gods, Mythology, Limited Liability Companies (like Boeing, Adidas, Tesla), and money (the dollar, euro, etc.) were fictitious entities that we made them up, and collectively believing in its value. Where we lose trust, they lose their value. If the gave and giving money value, those hard currency (gold, silver, and other metals), paper currency, and fiat; and crypto is also a virtual currency, why do we trust the former more than the latter? How ...
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One day, a friend ask, if one could justify the price of stocks by the value of its company, how do one judge the value of Bitcoin? There are no price/earnings ratio.
Like fiat, Bitcoin derived its value from public trust, and speculators and investors willingness to bet on its future. Except, it's not controlled by a government. Yet, as a medium to exchange for goods, we can't treat it more like a stock than like a fiat. Government control fiat to be stable, because human likes stability; but without a government, Bitcoin can't be stable, so only speculators and investors trade in it. But let's not forget that Bitcoin is a coin, a currency, not a stock equivalent.
There is one type of coin that acts like stocks though. These are the coins minted by DAO. DAO, where the "O" stands for "organization", acts like a company, hence it has an inherent value. Hence, we can relate its coins to the DAO's value. As stock doesn't reflect a company's value, DAO's minted coins also don't reflect a company's value, hence it tends to have overvaluation and undervaluation. At least, that's how one sees it. One doubt, with a coin that replace its stock, a DAO still have stock; but one don't know. DAO varies from DAO to DAO, and perhaps some board of directors might decide to have a DAO creating stocks, even though one don't see the point.
In conclusion, trading Bitcoin isn't the same as trading stocks. One trade stocks because one see the undervaluation of a stock price compared to the value of the company. One trade Bitcoin because one believe it'll rise in price in the future, when it's being undervalued. Probably a whole new field of investment are to apply to Bitcoin; yet, some of the current investment principle, especially those that relate to self-control (patience and wait), applies in all situation, regardless of how the trading is done.
This article is first written in read.cash.
One day, a friend ask, if one could justify the price of stocks by the value of its company, how do one judge the value of Bitcoin? There are no price/earnings ratio.
Like fiat, Bitcoin derived its value from public trust, and speculators and investors willingness to bet on its future. Except, it's not controlled by a government. Yet, as a medium to exchange for goods, we can't treat it more like a stock than like a fiat. Government control fiat to be stable, because human likes stability; but without a government, Bitcoin can't be stable, so only speculators and investors trade in it. But let's not forget that Bitcoin is a coin, a currency, not a stock equivalent.
There is one type of coin that acts like stocks though. These are the coins minted by DAO. DAO, where the "O" stands for "organization", acts like a company, hence it has an inherent value. Hence, we can relate its coins to the DAO's value. As stock doesn't reflect a company's value, DAO's minted coins also don't reflect a company's value, hence it tends to have overvaluation and undervaluation. At least, that's how one sees it. One doubt, with a coin that replace its stock, a DAO still have stock; but one don't know. DAO varies from DAO to DAO, and perhaps some board of directors might decide to have a DAO creating stocks, even though one don't see the point.
In conclusion, trading Bitcoin isn't the same as trading stocks. One trade stocks because one see the undervaluation of a stock price compared to the value of the company. One trade Bitcoin because one believe it'll rise in price in the future, when it's being undervalued. Probably a whole new field of investment are to apply to Bitcoin; yet, some of the current investment principle, especially those that relate to self-control (patience and wait), applies in all situation, regardless of how the trading is done.
This article is first written in read.cash.
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