
Kenny Jetski
3.9K posts




bitcoin is trading at $70k and people still laugh in my face when I say I'm full time crypto

Hey all, looks like @coinbase @CoinbaseBiz is killing their coinbase commerce platform and the business account are only available in the US and Singapore. So CT what are the option to replace them ? @MoonPayCommerce ? Who else ?

How to build a permaculture/forest garden system (long tweet) Let´s go step by step into how to transform a field into a productive, easy to maintain, forest garden & permaculture system Yes, some of my tweets are long, but it is the only way to provide quality and detail Step 1: Read Read a lot on gardening, permaculture, forest gardens: my favourite books remain: - creating a forest garden, martin crawford - the one straw revolution, masanobu fukuoka - sepp holzer´s permaculture - secrets life of plants, or secrets of the soil More recommendations can be found on my website in the ´extended recommended reading list´ section. These books will give you a good idea how to build a forest garden/permaculture system with minimal work and allow nature to do most. Step 2: Land One can transform a little city garden into a productive vegetable garden, but in this post we´ll look at larger pieces of land, let´s say at least 1000m2 or more, preferably bigger. To buy that, one has to go a bit remote, and there is plenty of land to find if you are willing to do that, especially thanks to starlink one can now work or trade (as many of you do) from remote places. If you buy land with a forest, you have to remove that first (or leave the useful trees that produce something). Step 3: Get to know your land Often sit in your garden, observe where the wind is coming from, how does the light move through the garden, what kind of animals or birds come nearby or visit, become acquainted with your little piece of paradise. Observe where are spots with more nettles for example (high nitrogen places) and what weeds and plants grow where. Step 4: Fencing Keeps the wild animals out: prevents boars, foxes, deers, or any other wild animals, to destroy everything you plant. While you fence, which is a lot of work, let all the grass and plants on your land grow for an entire year, don´t cut it. A lot of land is depleted so let nature for 1 year do its thing. Make sure to dig in the fence a bit, or some barbed wire at the bottom of the fence, so wild boars don´t try to get in. Step 5: Minerals A lot of land is depleted, so during the first year, spread a nice amount of volcanic rock dust, azomite for example, or any other mixture of rock dust rich in minerals. After a year, cut the grass and plants, and just leave it. Step 6: Planting Use the creating a forest garden book, and make a forest garden design. Use your observations from sitting in the garden to get the planting right once you know how to light and wind moves through your system. Also combine it with the permaculture zoning system so you put your chickens, annual vegetable garden, woodshed, and anything you often visit close to your house (if your house is close or on the land). Make sure in your design you leave enough space between trees and shrubs, you want enough light to reach the lower layers. I can go into much more detail on this, but not writing a book here, so look into the books i recommended. Add mycelium substrate to the hole when planting trees and shrubs, improves their growth and the health of the overall system. Step 7: Organic matter and compost Do not remove organic matter from your garden. Leaves, grass, whatever you cut or falls from trees, just leave it. Before transforming the lower levels of your garden into perennial plants, you have to cut the grass for a couple of years, so you can just leave that grass. In the future ,any trees or branches you cut, you can just put them on a pile somewhere on the side of your property, many animals will love to have a little shelter place. If you do an annual vegetable garden as well, one can make compost, but personally i don´t do that. I use a no-ploughing system with mulch in my annual vegetable garden. I throw cut grass in my chicken coop, the chickens shit on it, move it around, and once a week it take it out, and put it on the annual vegetable garden between the plants. A mulching system is much easier than ploughing every year. Look into no-mulching annual vegetable gardens, enough books on that. Experiment, read, and learn. Step 8: Building phase to maintenance phase After a couple of years, trees and shrubs and the lower perennials layer gets bigger, so you can dedicate less time to watering your plants when it is dry (they are bigger now so roots go deeper), and most of the system is build up. Building a forest garden system takes time, but after a while you really start to know your garden, what is happening, how your plants are doing (if they are sick or growing well), and you get into the habit of trying out new things. The building phase slowly phase into the maintenance phase Step 9: Economics: To build such a system, you obviously need to do some investing in land and plants, so you either have your residence next to your land or on your land, or have a plot of land nearby (buying farm land is cheap, but if you live in a city for example instead of on your land, you have to go visit often of course). Once your piece of paradise is growing, you can even generate income from it: i build a little cabin on my plot of land, and rented it for years for 50 euro a day, which sustained me for years (when living alone) while building out the system. I even know people that allow people to camp on their land for a fee (many apps for that), or have a small caravan which they rent. Giving tours or selling some produce can create extra income too. It is not a lot, but we are not creating a multi-trillion company. Also, websites like helpx, wooof, or workaway, will allow you to receive volunteers. For many years i had young people visit my farm and they would work 20 hours a week in exchange for food and lodging. It is a great way for young people to discover the world cheaply, and learn useful things. Once my kids are bigger, i would definitely recommend them do that. Step 10: Energetics & inner work: Plants don´t have a soul, but they do have etheric energy, meaning one can feel the energy of plants doing certain energetic practices. Look into tree chi gong for example. It is an amazing practice. Do your inner practice in the garden when you can. This land is your paradise, you are the steward, and really feel what is going on with the plants and your garden. In time you will pick up intuitively if something is not going well. In time you will become aware of even more subtle forces working in nature Step 11: Enjoy A garden is never finished, there is always something to do, but be patient. This process take years, or decades, and is really an exercise in patience, enjoying the moment, and learning as much about nature as you learn about yourself. Allow yourself to ´be´ in the garden´, and not only work & do things. See how the forces of this planet and your intention can re-create and re-generate your little paradise I can honestly say, that without my garden, and a place to often disconnect from screen time, i would not have become such a good investor or trader or would have deepened my inner practice so much. The forest garden/permaculture system i build allows: - healthy food for my family - a place to disconnect - a retreat place for inner work - huge joy to go pick berries, fruits, harvest food, with the family - a beautiful spot to feel plants and breath fresh air - a space to receive guests or visitors and burnt-out crypto traders - in the past it also provided me income Nature is generous, and the forest garden/permaculture system has given me and my family a lot I also think it is a beautiful gift to to pass a fully build forest garden/permaculture eco-system to future generations, because certain plants and trees take long time to grow and become productive. This planet has nurtured us, created us, fed us, and we are part of it, stewards of it, so passing a love and curiosity for nature and growing food along to future generations and yourself is worth it. Good luck


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Tonight, we reached an agreement with the Department of War to deploy our models in their classified network. In all of our interactions, the DoW displayed a deep respect for safety and a desire to partner to achieve the best possible outcome. AI safety and wide distribution of benefits are the core of our mission. Two of our most important safety principles are prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and human responsibility for the use of force, including for autonomous weapon systems. The DoW agrees with these principles, reflects them in law and policy, and we put them into our agreement. We also will build technical safeguards to ensure our models behave as they should, which the DoW also wanted. We will deploy FDEs to help with our models and to ensure their safety, we will deploy on cloud networks only. We are asking the DoW to offer these same terms to all AI companies, which in our opinion we think everyone should be willing to accept. We have expressed our strong desire to see things de-escalate away from legal and governmental actions and towards reasonable agreements. We remain committed to serve all of humanity as best we can. The world is a complicated, messy, and sometimes dangerous place.

The job market has not been the same since this TikTok was made



The LinkedIn-ification of American cities is kind of tragic









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Top DeFi protocols by TVL + revenue (2025): 1. Lido — $38B TVL, $9M/mo rev 2. Aave — $42B TVL, $13M/mo rev 3. Jupiter — $101M fees/mo, $24M rev 4. Pendle — $13B TVL, $8.8M fees/mo 5. MakerDAO/Sky — stablecoin + lending giant 6. Uniswap — $77M fees (no rev capture) 7. Curve — deep stablecoin liquidity 8. Hyperliquid — perps leader 9. dYdX — $307M TVL, ~$1.3M/mo rev 10. GMX — derivatives + fee sharing Aave, MakerDAO, and Compound collectively hold over 72% of DeFi lending TVL










