mark
43K posts

mark
@markmulvey
arts • investing • games • tech • code • philosophy • bitcoin


いつでも、どこでも立ち上がれる、歩けるってすごく幸せなこと。この子が、立ってこの美しい日を見たい気持ちすごいよくわかる。

Why don’t make games like this anymore?


This is not normal discourse. We don’t have to accept this as an acceptable line of thinking. In fact, you should reject it with every fiber in your being. These people hate normal Americans and the social norms that make our lives enjoyable and safe.

Every pawn move creates a permanent weakness. Before pushing, ask which squares you are giving up forever. Pieces can come back, pawns cannot. - My System by Aron Nimzowitsch

eliminate before you automate people are obsessed with efficiency and productivity, but a lot of what you do can just be deleted entirely. which is peak efficiency. every senior executive on the planet gets this advice. they ruthlessly decline, delete, and delegate.

“I used to be a pretty strong Bitcoiner” But listening to the original Ultrasound Money episode with @drakefjustin changed his mind: “I have no idea how Bitcoin is going to solve the declining security budget.” There’s really 2 options: - "You add tail issuance where you remove the 21 million hard cap." - "You move to proof of stake.” “in that scenario you kind of just sacrifice your number 1 advantage to Ethereum being that you don’t change." “Eventually, I swapped all my BTC to ETH.” - @mikemcg0, with @VivekVentures from @Etherealize_io 👇

Ecco the Dolphin: Complete announced by A&R Atelier Includes all versions of Ecco the Dolphin and Ecco: The Tides of Time and a brand-new contemporary Ecco game prnewswire.com/news-releases/…

“And Jeff Bezos has too much money - he's a billionaire - so why should I have to pay for organic avocados?” These people have the moral sophistication of a preschooler



What time is it? eccothedolphin.com

On this day 13 years ago, Vine user Ryan McHenry began uploading a series of videos titled "Ryan Gosling Won't Eat His Cereal."


💊 This woman just canceled both her and her son’s health insurance — and she’s standing firm even though everyone around her thinks she’s crazy. The new plan would’ve cost her almost $1,000 a month with a huge deductible, so she dropped it completely. Now she’s using GoodRx for her prescriptions (dropped from $50 a month to just $8 for three meds) and asking her doctors for the straight cash/self-pay price — which turned out to be way lower than she expected. It’s such a wild eye-opener about how broken the insurance system has gotten for a lot of families. Would you ever consider dropping your health insurance and going the self-pay/GoodRx route, or does that feel too risky to you? I think it could be a real money saver.





