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@iamsbnt

Sometimes you‘re the dog. Sometimes you‘re the tree.

Los Angeles, CA Katılım Ağustos 2012
2.2K Takip Edilen1.9K Takipçiler
Ivan on Tech 🍳📈💰 Head Trader @ Bullmania
PULSICANS!!! HEXICANS!!!! $PLS all time low again!! 🥳🎉 Lmaaaooooooo Your messiah can’t save you He is running and running He needs to hide Interpol chasing Your bags drip drop drip drop dropping down I love you ❤️ RT if bullish 🚀 #ivanwasright
Ivan on Tech 🍳📈💰 Head Trader @ Bullmania tweet media
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SPIN.@iamsbnt·
$Opal is extremely undervalued. @opalbotgg
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MOON KING B-ROOTS
MOON KING B-ROOTS@iambroots·
It’s funny……. All the people in #Pulsechain launched a coin and left or took a sacrifice and left. They all hated on me at one point, yet I never launched a coin or took a sacrifice, with a failing project and still here and standing. Thanks Richard No Heart Illiquid Loans No Power City No Pulse Mintrapiece of shit Stay the phux away and many of the influencers that launched coins My concious will be good when I die......
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SPIN.@iamsbnt·
9/ While institutional allocators waste their breath debating L2 throughput and monolithic vs. modular architectures, they are chasing ghosts. The true alpha of this supercycle does not lie in optimizing blockspace. It lies in the monetization of the human psyche. If you want to understand where the culture is moving, you must understand where the agony is. Study the trenches. Study $PAIN.
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SPIN.@iamsbnt·
8/ Throughout human history, the most resilient cultures and belief systems were never built around shared prosperity. They were forged in the fires of shared martyrdom A community organized under the banner of Maximum $PAIN possesses an infinite emotional half-life. It is structurally unbreakable. It is entirely immune to FUD because market devastation isn't its risk—it is its core foundation, its fuel, and its unfair advantage.
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SPIN.@iamsbnt·
1/ Most market participants completely misunderstand the macro-structural nature of the trenches. They waste their time looking for shallow trends, animals, or temporary hype cycles. They fail to see that the most dominant tokens of this epoch are hyper-localized liquid manifestations of collective psychological and macroeconomic trauma e.g. $PAIN.
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Cryptoshi
Cryptoshi@0xCryptoshi·
I’ve been watching pain for a bit and recently decided to jump in Here is my thesis on why i think it can be a 8-9 fig memecoin long- term $Pain is prob the most relatable ticker I have seen in 5 years in the trenches Especially the past couple years… It’s like you catch a break and then think “it’s here, my time is coming.” Just for you to lose it all and have to start over from 0 once again PAIN You get rugged by someone you thought you could “trust” PAIN You are up bigly on a trade only to round trip and lose it all in the end PAIN You get the point… Can you think of a ticker/ narrative the trenches collectively can relate to more? For me I cannot This one just resonates with me and I think it’s just a matter of time before ct catches on Could be one of the biggest narratives of the cycle as we are all in a lot of pain Not wrong just early 🖤 🥀
Cryptoshi tweet media
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Ole Lehmann
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann·
Germany is a sleeping giant of physical AI everyone's been writing Germany off in the AI race because there's no German OpenAI and no big data center story. but theres actually two AI races happening: the first is software. chatbots, LLMs, data centers. US/China are winning that, not even close. the second one is physical. robots that pick up boxes, weld cars, carry groceries, stack pallets. and on this one Germany is one of the top contenders in the world this stat might convince you (it convinced me): Germany is 3rd in the world for robots per factory workers (449 robots per 10,000 human workers). only South Korea (1,220) and Singapore (818) are ahead. Japan is behind at 446. the US is all the way back at 307. so Germany already runs more of its economy on robots than almost anywhere else on earth. and the German companies building this next wave of physical AI are some global heavyweights. a few worth knowing... > Neura Robotics in Metzingen is building humanoid robots and raising €1B from Tether at a €4B valuation (this was March 2026). Volvo already in from an earlier round. > Sereact in Stuttgart raised $110M in April 2026 to build the software brain that lets robots see and grab things. already runs 1 billion+ real-world picks for BMW, Mercedes, and Daimler Truck. > Agile Robots in Munich was the worlds first robotics unicorn. revenue doubling yearly, around €200M now, heading for €1B. >RobCo in Munich raised $100M in early 2026 at a ~$500M valuation. their robots learn new tasks by watching a worker do it once instead of getting programmed line by line. already pushing into the US and aimed at the small and mid-size factories that make up most of german industry. > Fraunhofer (Germany's network of 76 applied research labs) built the evoBOT in the video below. self-balancing, two arms, carries 100kg of cargo, being tested at Munich Airport right now. but why is Germany specifically well positioned for physical AI though? three things stack on top of each other. first, the factories. Germany has thousands of family-owned precision manufacturing shops that have been logging sensor data for decades. that data is basically the training fuel for physical AI and almost nobody else has it at this depth. second, the customers are already there in-country. VW, BMW, Mercedes, Porsche, Bosch, Siemens. a robotics startup in Stuttgart can ship its first commercial deployment to a brand everyone recognizes in year one. that's why Sereact's customer list reads like a german car show lol. third, the engineer pipeline. Fraunhofer spins out companies like Agile Robots straight from its labs. KUKA built the first 6-axis electromechanical robot arm back in 1973. they've been doing this for 50 years. so the chatbot race is mostly settled and Germany lost spectacularly but the robot race is still early innings. and i think Germany's well positioned
Space and Technology@spaceandtech_

This is evoBOT, a robot helper developed by Germany’s Fraunhofer Institute for Material Flow and Logistics. It can grasp and carry goods to support cargo workers in transporting packages. evoBOT can also move smoothly across uneven terrain, including bumpy surfaces and sloping ground.

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David Hoffman
David Hoffman@TrustlessState·
I spent the weekend putting my thoughts about $ETH and Ethereum into this article I built my career, community, and business on Ethereum, so the decision to sell deserves a deeper explanation I hope this is sufficient Thank you, all
David Hoffman@TrustlessState

x.com/i/article/2059…

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eric
eric@econoar·
I don't really blame David, ETH has grossly underperformed the general crypto market for many years now. I think a lot of his views here are valid and as I've mentioned, I've personally divested a lot out of ETH the past 1-2 years now. To this point, everything I've switched into has greatly outperformed ETH. Honestly, I don't even think ETH underperforming is really related to any fundamental wrong doing. One thing I think a lot of people fail to realize is how violent the initial ETH run was. It's going to take a long time to shake off the breadth of millionaires that were created in such a short period of time. At the end of the day, maximalism to a single coin when it comes to portfolio management is pretty silly. The market doesn't lie, there's no reason to trade against it. You can always trade back into a coin if it gets hot.
David Hoffman@TrustlessState

x.com/i/article/2059…

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SPIN.@iamsbnt·
@DarioMaglov @itsolelehmann Physical AI requires significantly more energy because it’s not just about standard computing. Running and charging actual robot fleets, autonomous hardware on a big scale creates massive, localized load peaks.
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Dario Maglov
Dario Maglov@DarioMaglov·
@iamsbnt @itsolelehmann The first one is still true. But what intermittency? What bottlenecks? There are bottlenecks bringing renewable power from nord see to south Germany but not a general lack of power.
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