
Flow Like Water
4.2K posts

Flow Like Water
@FlowLikeETH
internal and external progression













Air filtration at home and work is an easy health win. In my house and office, each room has an air filter and monitor. I try to maintain pristine air quality 24/7. Air pollutants PM2.5, PM10 and poisonous gases like volatile organic compounds (VOCs), nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, and sulfur dioxide, directly contact the respiratory tract, lungs, and eyes, causing irritation and direct toxicity. Smaller particles, particularly ultrafine particles and certain PM2.5 components, can cross the lung tissue (alveoli) into the bloodstream, leading to systemic and metabolic toxicity, as well as hormone and immune dysregulation. Airborne pollutants can also be ingested, irritating the digestive system. Air pollutants increase the risk of respiratory diseases, including lung cancer, negatively affect children's development, focus, and cognitive performance, and are increasingly linked to metabolic disruption, liver disease risk, allergies in children, and elevated risks of multimorbidity and mortality. Using an in-room HEPA filter is a good idea, even if your home uses an HVAC system with filtration. This is because many pollutants originate indoors; cooking, especially pan frying, is a major source of DNA-damaging and potentially carcinogenic toxins, such as aldehydes and PAHs. Key strategies for preventing internal air pollution buildup are good kitchen ventilation with an effective kitchen hood and excellent overall air circulation. Without proper ventilation, frying can temporarily make your kitchen air quality worse than the most polluted areas globally. Additionally, if you use an HVAC system, ensure filters are replaced regularly, and the system is inspected for humidity and mold, as these can contribute to mold and moisture problems in the home. The same regular filter replacement applies to your kitchen hood and in-room air filters. The video below demonstrates the significant difference achievable even with simple, small in-room HEPA filters. These units start at approximately $50 (with filter changes every 2–3 months costing around $20) and can dramatically improve your indoor air quality.





We just made a $200,000,000 AI movie in just one day. Yes, this is 100% AI.


Barry Silbert bought Bitcoin in 2012 at $7-8 Built Grayscale from there. Became the guy who actually gave institutions a way into crypto when everyone else was still trying to explain what a private key was Now he's doing the same thing with @bittensor DCG launched Yuma for the $TAO ecosystem. Started funds specifically for subnet tokens. Grayscale set up a Bittensor Trust so institutions can buy in without touching wallets. His take is interesting. He doesn't see Bitcoin doing another 500x from here. But Bittensor? He thinks it can because it's solving actual problems. Not just digital gold - it's infrastructure for decentralized AI that's being built and used right now. Same pattern as early Bitcoin. Decentralized infrastructure going up against centralized players. Open vs closed. Permissionless vs gated. Supply looks like Bitcoin too. 21 million cap. Already had its first halving in December. And while most people are still confused about what Bittensor even does, institutions are moving. BitGo added staking. Deutsche launched a product in Switzerland. Grayscale's trust is running. Price bouncing between $150-250 right now. If the 500x thesis plays out, that's $100k+ per $TAO. Silbert spotted Bitcoin at $7. Built the infrastructure that brought billions into crypto. Now running the exact same playbook with decentralized AI. Pattern's repeating #Bittensor


This is the story of Dave Welcome to that Money Badger life gMoney

















