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“We know more than what we can tell.”
– Michael Polani on the importance of IRL cooperation
Hewlett and packed; Jobs and Vose; Gates and Allen; Page and Brin; Bezos and (now-for) cup forces.
The history of technology in the US is the history of two people who incubate all new industries from a garage.
Has any of the heart-packed, Apple, Microsoft, Google or Amazon have been incubated on the zoom?
We will never know, but empirical evidence does not suggest. Even in this era of video conferencing, face-to-face interaction is an important component in innovation alchemy.
One Study For example, adding non-stop flights between the two places led to the statistically significant increase in research quotes and collaborative patents between the above places.
Published in another study NatureAn explanation provides why closing the couch and it may be worth it on a flight: “Videoconferencing haemors Idea generation because it concentrates communicators on a screen, which focuses a narrow cognitive focus.”
(As is someone who happily works with a couch, I report the result that is only reluctant.)
Researchers have also used GPS data from Silicon Valley To determine the effect of encounters on innovation, find “adequate returns in face-to-face meetings”.
It is easy to imagine why this can happen.
Citing just one loss with distance work, 25% emoji We misinterpret the recipient, often they intended in the opposite way.
How long would Steve Wozniaq have placed with Steve Jobs if any part of his communication was done by a text message?
Not for a long time, I am guessing.
Businesses are getting this – it is probably why they spent an estimated $ 1.4 Trillion Flying staff for IRL meetings last year.
Businesses do not spend that kind of money if they do not think they are returning to it.
I am guessing why it is also that the crypto conference such as permissionless
You can see the vibrant of all the panels of this week from your couch, but it is more fun to be personally.
Even more productive.
Some things I heard on the first day
Mike Empolito opened the conference with some charts and a call to action.
The growing ratio of crypto trading on decentralized vs. centralized exchanges is a major performance indicator that is not called permission that everyone in a conference will feel good:
Binance and Coinbase are great (and will make excellent sponsors of this newspaper). But raison d’etre People in the Crypto industry have to carry forward and by that measure, we feel that sudden progress has been made.
Onchain generated revenue is slightly lower, however:
Using Solana network revenue as a benchmark, there is a lack of speed in the industry.
Flatlineing Revenue is an indication that we are still waiting for a breakout application to motivate people to do things (in addition to business memecoin).
Asked for a Crypto success story this morning, Bitkinar Peter Todd cited a polymerte-but could not immediately remember its name, mistakenly said that it is on Solana (it is on polygon), and then all non-bitcoin blockchains and applications were dismissed as “highly centralized”.
I think, the non-bitCoine Crypto industry still has a solution to find utility and to be reliably decentralized.
Non-sovereen money, stabechoids and permissionless gambling (aka, memecoins) are an excellent beginning.
But is this all?
Inquiries from the permission -free attendees this morning show that crypto enthusiasts are still expecting more, but are uncertain about what can happen.
In opening the conference, Mike Eppolito quoted Nikola Tesla and implicated the challenge of the Crypto industry: “The present is their; the future, for which I really worked, is mine.”
In other words, money and finance are still related to tradefi, and it will not change until the crypto people change it.
“The current is not quite good,” Empolyto concluded, “and responsibility is on us and on us to improve it alone.”
keynote speaker: Eric Adams, New York’s first bitcoin mayor
The Mayor started his talk by remembering his family story, which began in the nearby brown, Brooklyn, before going to Jamaica, Queens.
It echoed with me because my mother’s family side did the opposite, going from Queens to Brooklyn, where I spent my early year 0 to 3.
(Yes, I am from Brooklyn, but no, don’t ask me for directions.)
More and more, the mayor used his original story to explain his support to the Crypto industry.
Given that more than 40% of Brooklyn’s residents speak a language in addition to English at home, Adams said that he expects New Yorker Bitcoin as a better way to send money to relatives abroad.
This is almost the oldest idea in Crypto and yet really to catch, but perhaps we still need to spread the word: Adams emphasized the need of the industry to educate people to educate people how Crypto “benefits everyday working class people in the city.”
To benefit the city itself, Adams plugged his idea for the municipal bonds supported by Bitbonds – Bitcoin.
As long as New Yorkers were able to pay their parking tickets in bitcoin, I made a little until the New Yorker used to return his bonds.
“We would like to do so,” the mayor replied.
And why not, this will be a cheap call option for the city: If bitcoin goes up, take yourself; If it goes down, then default!
Unfortunately, the mayor may not have enough time to do so. Gives the above polymarkat adams 10% probability Re -election in November.
Panel i saw: As I expected, the afternoon track on Dipin restored my belief that Crypto is trying to solve at least real problems.
David Voric said that in some parts of the emerging markets, “there is a difference between energy life and death.” He explained that the mission of his depin venture, shineExactly to encourage the manufacture of solar energy at those places.
Listening to Voric is a reminder that can be aimed at gambling crypto tokens. “If you want to see too much solar in the world,” he said, “Catching glow tokens is a way to express both that preference and helps make it.” (Paraphraseed.)
If this you think, this is because you are reading it in a newspaper – personally, it seems completely honest, as I am sure it is.
Abhay Kumar off Helium foundation Similarly, it was explained that Dapin is “a new way of creating a network” and that tokens determine what types of networks are created: “Voting with your wallet is real.”
Finally, Sam Hogan explained that Infererance.net “Data centers around the world are creating a depin network to help them fill their extra capacity” – a case of use that will only be more useful, I imagine.
Depin is no longer a new thing, and the results so far have been minor.
But it is expected that large things are coming: Panelists quoted satellites, manufacturing and drone as important areas that are the most ripe for dipin-enabled disruption.
Quotes from one day: “It’s very stupid, you are going to lose money, but it’s fun.” – Dan Smith, Blockworks Research, Memcoins
“You have to break your brain to understand it.” – Dan Smith on Memcoin industry
“I don’t think tokens should have money. Tokens require some utility in the network.” – Sam Hogan, Infererance.NET
“I think tokens are one of the most powerful forms of money.” – David Voric, Shine
“We are now super excited about Crypto.” – David Roads, permitted laboratories, bandwidth was awarded after looking at the demand for Dipin
“We are really using enough of the goods that people are willing to pay for it, which is very exciting.” – Logan Justramsky, free friction
Hearing: “People can’t think of two things at a time.” – Unnamed, AI on Crypto losing Mindsheer and why “Sleeping on Tradefi Crypto”
Crypto conference innovation: Keeping half the conference out is an excellent idea, even when it is 100 degrees out.
Day -to -day mercury: Cooling Neck Scarf. Dip them in ice water, wrap them around your neck, and you will forget it in summer in New York City.
I learned something: Air conditioning is the biggest invention in human history.
Today’s big tech: With egg and cheese, salt, pepper and ketchup on a roll.
Let’s meet for two days tomorrow.
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