Mayor
2.1K posts

















Six months of work. Today we ship. The first launchpad where memecoins and prediction markets live in one terminal. This is what I believe in. bread.hot















🌌 How you slept last night is already predicting: → How focused you'll be today → How your body will handle food → How quickly you'll recover from exercise → How you'll regulate stress at 4pm Sleep is more than recovery: it's health intelligence in its earliest form.





gQuack, friends and @wallchain fam. A few years ago, if someone asked why they should hire you, the shortest answer was usually a degree. Today I'm not so sure. I keep seeing more people build careers through small pieces of proof instead of one big credential. A certificate for analytics. A course on AI tools. A track record of campaign work. A public portfolio. None of these replace a degree on their own, but together they tell a more fluent story. What interests me is that the market seems less impressed by what you studied years ago and more interested in what you can show today. A university degree still matters. It gives structure, fundamentals, and knowledge that takes time to build. But if a role needs someone who can run ad campaigns, analyze audiences, write content, or work with AI tools right now, employers often want proof of that specific skill. That is probably why micro-credentials keep gaining ground. In creator communities, this shift is even more obvious. Nobody asks a creator where they studied content strategy. People look at the work. They look at the audience. They look at past campaigns. They look at results. A creator who consistently explains difficult topics well builds a reputation that says more than a line on a resume. That is one reason I find Wallchain interesting. The platform already keeps track of participation, contribution, campaign history, reputation, and audience quality. When you think about it, those are all pieces of evidence too. If the next few years bring more skills-based hiring and more proof-based opportunities, then reputation systems may become much more valuable than many people expect today. Maybe the biggest change is not that degrees are losing value. Maybe it is that proof is becoming easier to collect, easier to verify, and easier to carry from one opportunity to the next. And once that happens, people start paying more attention to what you can demonstrate than to what you can claim. Anyway, that's enough education talk from me. I hope you all have a wonderful Sunday. Don’t forget to spend some time with your loved ones today.



Road To Magnus: Top-16 Knockout of @AnichessGame x.com/i/broadcasts/1…


