

Well, in Finland, this kind of setup is deeply default. It becomes the main power consumer in November though.
Well, in Finland, this kind of setup is deeply default. It becomes the main power consumer in November though.
Damn these translated abbriviations are tough. For me they were BRD and DDR
Wtf how Scandinavia and Japan are not on top?
Funny thing about Germany, after all these years, quality differs a lot between west and former ussr ghetto. Knowing this saves lots of cash.
They’ve got good guitars
Yeah, the “diversification” was - instead of few companies buying chinese cloth and sewing it together into masks, more companies did the same; and yet more multiplied simple resalers. I’ve been there, my boss at the time asked if we could mix hand sanitizer in our gear; why we could’ve, but resalers would’ve kicked our ass at the time.
Was thinking about this very topic, although I plan to catch wind.
So far the best ideas I’ve got are:
Home power storage is very hard to design. Ballpark-wise, I found that energy storage could be as profitable as renting space for living, normalized by square meter; thus it’s bound to be at least about as expensive to run. If possible, you should consider making smart grid with neighbours.
You should also have a look at Polkadot Vault, internals of which were also done by me and my wife. The concept is very elegant, you can easily adopt this technology and use an old end of life smartphone as absolutely the best crypto storage device.
None of these are technically wallets though, but now that I’m not developing these I’m free to not be pedantic, yeee-haw.
Ledger does not opensource half of their gear, and it is kinda potentially vulnerable with their silent upgrade capabilities and “cloud secret storage” (and their secure storage chip does not seem to have PUF and could be better for all we know but that’s not important really). I was terrified by that device when it just appeared long time ago, for upgrade-over-network is a potential for quite an attack; time proved that the company is mostly decent though and we haven’t seen much issues (we’ve seen some, but those were technical and you should expect that at cutting edge, even if by “technical” I mean some human psychology hacks).
So after studying the market (which is not as large as I hoped at some point lol), I came up with reasonable (conspiracy) theory of Ledger’s economy workings: there is no way those investments they’ve attracted would ever return really, there is just not enough adoption, even if they do have absolutely hats-off the best and most convenient software support for many, many currencies (yes, with its flaws, yes, sometimes tokens get stuck for months or years - but that’s cold storage device mostly, and cutting edge technologies, with prioritization of profit over technological advancement or even usability, one should expect that). On the other hand, there are people who want extremely secure wallet to store loads of tokens comfortably (the best storage is acid-free paper with carbon ink seed phrase in sealed vial, but that’s not enterprise nor comfortable and you can’t exit markets fast). These people can pay some engineering shop to develop some storage device, but then they would just be vulnerable to this shop’s potential backdoors. And device would be quite expensive, to cover the development costs.
So, to protect themselves, they could make lots of other people buy these devices too. Launch super aggressive marketing campaign, make device really cheap, add tutorials and very nice app, etc. Exactly what Ledger did - so indeed, these are very expensive devices for the investors, and thanks to their demand, quite cheap for the rest of us. Elegant solution, for once market working nicely.
I do not have a Ledger, I bought one when they just were released, played with it a bit, and gave it away to a friend who hoards crypto. This thing still does not feel right, but mostly, I do not hoard tokens, just use them for payment and research.
Have a look at Kampela, if you are looking to build. I made it, it’s opensource, and it’s quite easy to implement for Eth or BTC (I did Eth part halfway). DM me if you have any questions, I gave away that company to some “business dudes” to commercialize, but it doesn’t look like they are having a good time lately. But it’s opensource, feel free to do whatever as long as it stays toxic GPL3.
Crypto currencies as they exist now are indeed mostly scam, it was a fun task to complete though. They are good for large-distance international payments though (Australia, I mean you! I have to buy GammaSpectacular gear for BTC wtf are we civilized world or what? Damn lazy bankers!)
Just old farts being naturally (not without covid help though) replaced with people with demand for future, I wish brexit voting was delayed.
Didn’t Finnish IQM do it already?
Saw word “merino”, came to type “varusteleka”, yet here it is already!
Couldn’t start using Vespucci, unfortunately. Too messy - when you are on the run, best you can do is make notes and record tracks to draw them later (or let others do it). I’m sure it has its uses though.
Trying DigiAgriApp now, with my sensor network and public mapping, this looks like path to some weird solarpunk grassroots future. Starting server from docker is surprisingly messy though, I still fail to patch it through https somehow.
Just keep contributing bit by bit. It’s a shame, I’m a busy CEO living in middle of nowhere with nothing to map, still #2 last week in my country, #12 for all times,seriously, if I had this thing as a student, I’d be doing nothing else, we were photographing cities with my friends back in the days for centralized maps and it’s way more labor. Go install streetcomplete and just have fun, it’s autistic paradize I live in now!
It has not much use in Finland anyway, and some banks do not even support any integration. I do not understand why would anyone use it, even though I lived in different countries when it was all hype, never even considered enrolling. Like letting some entity you don’t trust that’s not even governed by your laws with you money? No, thanks.