Ecoer Logo
VOTING POWER100.00%
DOWNVOTE POWER100.00%
RESOURCE CREDITS100.00%
REPUTATION PROGRESS63.99%
Net Worth
2.059USD
STEEM
30.801STEEM
SBD
0.009SBD
Own SP
4.630SP

Detailed Balance

STEEM
balance
30.801STEEM
market_balance
0.000STEEM
savings_balance
0.000STEEM
reward_steem_balance
0.000STEEM
STEEM POWER
Own SP
4.630SP
Delegated Out
0.000SP
Delegation In
0.000SP
Effective Power
4.630SP
Reward SP (pending)
0.000SP
SBD
sbd_balance
0.009SBD
sbd_conversions
0.000SBD
sbd_market_balance
0.000SBD
savings_sbd_balance
0.000SBD
reward_sbd_balance
0.000SBD
{
  "balance": "30.801 STEEM",
  "savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "vesting_shares": "7529.491024 VESTS",
  "delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "received_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "sbd_balance": "0.009 SBD",
  "savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "reward_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "conversions": []
}

Account Info

namekinnard
id187825
rank1,058,108
reputation253766357503
created2017-06-13T03:37:30
recovery_accountsteem
proxyNone
post_count13
comment_count0
lifetime_vote_count0
witnesses_voted_for1
last_post2018-11-06T17:49:12
last_root_post2018-11-06T17:49:12
last_vote_time2018-11-07T22:38:24
proxied_vsf_votes0, 0, 0, 0
can_vote1
voting_power10,000
delayed_votes0
balance30.801 STEEM
savings_balance0.000 STEEM
sbd_balance0.009 SBD
savings_sbd_balance0.000 SBD
vesting_shares7529.491024 VESTS
delegated_vesting_shares0.000000 VESTS
received_vesting_shares0.000000 VESTS
reward_vesting_balance0.000000 VESTS
vesting_balance0.000 STEEM
vesting_withdraw_rate0.000000 VESTS
next_vesting_withdrawal1969-12-31T23:59:59
withdrawn61824719874
to_withdraw61824719874
withdraw_routes0
savings_withdraw_requests0
last_account_recovery1970-01-01T00:00:00
reset_accountnull
last_owner_update1970-01-01T00:00:00
last_account_update2017-07-03T17:32:06
minedNo
sbd_seconds0
sbd_last_interest_payment2017-07-16T21:16:12
savings_sbd_last_interest_payment1970-01-01T00:00:00
{
  "active": {
    "account_auths": [],
    "key_auths": [
      [
        "STM7rCWXBzbRneB6V5mG6iWp6qScpQ4C62iPBkEFHexn8B5Tj5BBx",
        1
      ]
    ],
    "weight_threshold": 1
  },
  "balance": "30.801 STEEM",
  "can_vote": true,
  "comment_count": 0,
  "created": "2017-06-13T03:37:30",
  "curation_rewards": 23,
  "delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "downvote_manabar": {
    "current_mana": 0,
    "last_update_time": 1497325050
  },
  "guest_bloggers": [],
  "id": 187825,
  "json_metadata": "{\"profile\":{\"profile_image\":\"https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/849630789444567040/6b2GvdUw_400x400.jpg\"}}",
  "last_account_recovery": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "last_account_update": "2017-07-03T17:32:06",
  "last_owner_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "last_post": "2018-11-06T17:49:12",
  "last_root_post": "2018-11-06T17:49:12",
  "last_vote_time": "2018-11-07T22:38:24",
  "lifetime_vote_count": 0,
  "market_history": [],
  "memo_key": "STM6g9GnuEg2fNhoVNV3irbqgRJjawB2GQQK2iGSMbnDaJwdY6rDg",
  "mined": false,
  "name": "kinnard",
  "next_vesting_withdrawal": "1969-12-31T23:59:59",
  "other_history": [],
  "owner": {
    "account_auths": [],
    "key_auths": [
      [
        "STM5aV2Sf7voTQhWJXoCQxqomTrp1QCEUb44EMsAD8gxsVKMaZpbM",
        1
      ]
    ],
    "weight_threshold": 1
  },
  "pending_claimed_accounts": 0,
  "post_bandwidth": 0,
  "post_count": 13,
  "post_history": [],
  "posting": {
    "account_auths": [],
    "key_auths": [
      [
        "STM72zt1jKPofZDz25goHiCTQProefcP5McfbteqhCzmRMXz1wVxa",
        1
      ]
    ],
    "weight_threshold": 1
  },
  "posting_json_metadata": "{\"profile\":{\"profile_image\":\"https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/849630789444567040/6b2GvdUw_400x400.jpg\"}}",
  "posting_rewards": 66028,
  "proxied_vsf_votes": [
    0,
    0,
    0,
    0
  ],
  "proxy": "",
  "received_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "recovery_account": "steem",
  "reputation": "253766357503",
  "reset_account": "null",
  "reward_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "reward_vesting_balance": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "reward_vesting_steem": "0.000 STEEM",
  "savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "savings_sbd_last_interest_payment": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "savings_sbd_seconds": "0",
  "savings_sbd_seconds_last_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "savings_withdraw_requests": 0,
  "sbd_balance": "0.009 SBD",
  "sbd_last_interest_payment": "2017-07-16T21:16:12",
  "sbd_seconds": "0",
  "sbd_seconds_last_update": "2017-07-16T21:16:12",
  "tags_usage": [],
  "to_withdraw": "61824719874",
  "transfer_history": [],
  "vesting_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "vesting_shares": "7529.491024 VESTS",
  "vesting_withdraw_rate": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "vote_history": [],
  "voting_manabar": {
    "current_mana": "67967126680",
    "last_update_time": 1541630304
  },
  "voting_power": 10000,
  "withdraw_routes": 0,
  "withdrawn": "61824719874",
  "witness_votes": [
    "agoric.systems"
  ],
  "witnesses_voted_for": 1,
  "rank": 1058108
}

Withdraw Routes

IncomingOutgoing
Empty
Empty
{
  "incoming": [],
  "outgoing": []
}
From Date
To Date
2019/06/13 05:07:27
authorsteemitboard
bodyCongratulations @kinnard! You received a personal award! <table><tr><td>https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@kinnard/birthday2.png</td><td>Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 2 years!</td></tr></table> <sub>_You can view [your badges on your Steem Board](https://steemitboard.com/@kinnard) and compare to others on the [Steem Ranking](https://steemitboard.com/ranking/index.php?name=kinnard)_</sub> ###### [Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1) to get one more award and increased upvotes!
json metadata{"image":["https://steemitboard.com/img/notify.png"]}
parent authorkinnard
parent permlinkworking-bottom-up-why-warren-buffett-doesn-t-get-blockchain
permlinksteemitboard-notify-kinnard-20190613t050726000z
title
Transaction InfoBlock #33754472/Trx 6de06407b934cc4d70de34909ad01da2b3816f31
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 33754472,
  "op": [
    "comment",
    {
      "author": "steemitboard",
      "body": "Congratulations @kinnard! You received a personal award!\n\n<table><tr><td>https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@kinnard/birthday2.png</td><td>Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 2 years!</td></tr></table>\n\n<sub>_You can view [your badges on your Steem Board](https://steemitboard.com/@kinnard) and compare to others on the [Steem Ranking](https://steemitboard.com/ranking/index.php?name=kinnard)_</sub>\n\n\n###### [Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1) to get one more award and increased upvotes!",
      "json_metadata": "{\"image\":[\"https://steemitboard.com/img/notify.png\"]}",
      "parent_author": "kinnard",
      "parent_permlink": "working-bottom-up-why-warren-buffett-doesn-t-get-blockchain",
      "permlink": "steemitboard-notify-kinnard-20190613t050726000z",
      "title": ""
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-06-13T05:07:27",
  "trx_id": "6de06407b934cc4d70de34909ad01da2b3816f31",
  "trx_in_block": 1,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
kinnardreceived 0.000 STEEM from power down installment (0.000 SP)
2019/03/19 17:44:39
deposited0.000 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn0.000008 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #31296166/Virtual Operation #5
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 31296166,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "0.000 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "0.000008 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-03-19T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 5
}
kinnardreceived 2.375 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2019/03/12 17:44:39
deposited2.375 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #31094726/Virtual Operation #7
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 31094726,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.375 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-03-12T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 7
}
kinnardreceived 2.374 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2019/03/05 17:44:39
deposited2.374 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #30893267/Virtual Operation #2
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 30893267,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.374 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-03-05T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 2
}
kinnardreceived 2.373 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2019/02/26 17:44:39
deposited2.373 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #30691799/Virtual Operation #2
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 30691799,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.373 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-02-26T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 2
}
kinnardreceived 2.372 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2019/02/19 17:44:39
deposited2.372 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #30490346/Virtual Operation #3
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 30490346,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.372 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-02-19T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 3
}
kinnardreceived 2.371 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2019/02/12 17:44:39
deposited2.371 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #30288906/Virtual Operation #5
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 30288906,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.371 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-02-12T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 5
}
kinnardreceived 2.370 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2019/02/05 17:44:39
deposited2.370 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #30087458/Virtual Operation #2
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 30087458,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.370 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-02-05T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 2
}
kinnardreceived 2.369 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2019/01/29 17:44:39
deposited2.369 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #29886039/Virtual Operation #2
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 29886039,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.369 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-01-29T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 2
}
kinnardreceived 2.368 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2019/01/22 17:44:39
deposited2.368 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #29684691/Virtual Operation #9
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 29684691,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.368 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-01-22T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 9
}
kinnardreceived 2.367 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2019/01/15 17:44:39
deposited2.367 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #29483284/Virtual Operation #7
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 29483284,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.367 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-01-15T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 7
}
kinnardreceived 2.367 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2019/01/08 17:44:39
deposited2.367 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #29281823/Virtual Operation #3
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 29281823,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.367 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-01-08T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 3
}
kinnardreceived 2.366 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2019/01/01 17:44:39
deposited2.366 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #29080459/Virtual Operation #8
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 29080459,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.366 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-01-01T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 8
}
kinnardreceived 2.365 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2018/12/25 17:44:39
deposited2.365 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #28878967/Virtual Operation #12
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 28878967,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.365 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2018-12-25T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 12
}
kinnardreceived 2.364 STEEM from power down installment (2.924 SP)
2018/12/18 17:44:39
deposited2.364 STEEM
from accountkinnard
to accountkinnard
withdrawn4755.747682 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #28677496/Virtual Operation #22
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 28677496,
  "op": [
    "fill_vesting_withdraw",
    {
      "deposited": "2.364 STEEM",
      "from_account": "kinnard",
      "to_account": "kinnard",
      "withdrawn": "4755.747682 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2018-12-18T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 22
}
kinnardstarted power down of 38.016 SP
2018/12/11 17:44:39
accountkinnard
vesting shares61824.719874 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #28476031/Trx 5f3dfb72eae9f6d08c7534914c8b5837bd58a5eb
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 28476031,
  "op": [
    "withdraw_vesting",
    {
      "account": "kinnard",
      "vesting_shares": "61824.719874 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2018-12-11T17:44:39",
  "trx_id": "5f3dfb72eae9f6d08c7534914c8b5837bd58a5eb",
  "trx_in_block": 45,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2018/11/08 12:00:24
authorkinnard
permlinkworking-bottom-up-why-warren-buffett-doesn-t-get-blockchain
voterdavidsmith
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #27519251/Trx 6756c62c89064f34d01d786b34b4ed4760f20b27
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 27519251,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "working-bottom-up-why-warren-buffett-doesn-t-get-blockchain",
      "voter": "davidsmith",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2018-11-08T12:00:24",
  "trx_id": "6756c62c89064f34d01d786b34b4ed4760f20b27",
  "trx_in_block": 1,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2018/11/07 22:38:24
authorkinnard
permlinkworking-bottom-up-why-warren-buffett-doesn-t-get-blockchain
voterkinnard
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #27503226/Trx 0fc793a0b8a235a5229c2e9c0ff5c57207a89126
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 27503226,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "working-bottom-up-why-warren-buffett-doesn-t-get-blockchain",
      "voter": "kinnard",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2018-11-07T22:38:24",
  "trx_id": "0fc793a0b8a235a5229c2e9c0ff5c57207a89126",
  "trx_in_block": 24,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2018/11/06 18:54:57
authorkinnard
permlinkworking-bottom-up-why-warren-buffett-doesn-t-get-blockchain
votersensation
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #27469983/Trx f25c8efdc627b6e2d53def54cc0b84615147d39c
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 27469983,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "working-bottom-up-why-warren-buffett-doesn-t-get-blockchain",
      "voter": "sensation",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2018-11-06T18:54:57",
  "trx_id": "f25c8efdc627b6e2d53def54cc0b84615147d39c",
  "trx_in_block": 10,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2018/11/06 17:57:00
authorkinnard
body# Working Bottom Up Why Warren Buffet Doesn't "get" Blockchain ![Flammarion Woodcut](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmYAUo9w1v11C5UWveJveTdVUdWUx61Cb5mLPJLZFp3vjW/image.png) [By Houston Physicist](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flammarion_engraving#/media/File:Flammarion_Colored.jpg) We believe blockchain technology and the movement it has spawned is the most important thing happening now, both for humanity collectively and for individual people. But this new technology is like a sword. First you must train your hands to use the sword. Our curriculum is designed to be the most effective way to learn, get up and running, and take flight. It is a sweeping survey history of numbers, the history of letters, and the history of human values. Each component builds up to the next. But this isn't just because it's necessary to understand underlying concepts first in order to understand the ones built on top of them. It's structured this way in order to achieve a certain effect. The whole way up you should be keenly aware that we're building toward something. We call this way, "**working bottom up**". Paul Graham elucidates this idea in the context of programing: >"It's worth emphasizing that bottom-up design doesn't mean just writing the same program in a different order. When you work bottom-up, you usually end up with a different program. Instead of a single, monolithic program, you will get a larger language with more abstract operators, and a smaller program written in it. Instead of a lintel, you'll get an arch."[1](http://paulgraham.com/progbot.html) What's so special about working this way? It's more powerful. "The biggest disadvantage to a post and lintel construction is the limited weight that can be held up, and the small distances[gaps] required between the posts. Ancient Roman architecture's development of the arch allowed for much larger structures to be constructed. The arcuated system spreads larger loads more effectively, and replaced the post and lintel trabeated system in most larger buildings and structures, until the introduction of steel girder beams in the industrial era."[2](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_and_lintel) Underlying misconceptions or gaps in knowledge prevent you from building higher. Salman Khan describes it with the metaphor of building a house: "I saw this in the early days working with my cousins. A lot of them were having trouble with math at first, because they had all of these gaps accumulated in their learning. [A]t some point they got to an algebra class and they might have been a little bit shaky on some of the pre-algebra, and because of that, they thought they didn't have the math gene. To appreciate how absurd that is, imagine if we did other things in our life that way. Say, home-building," you'd partially build a foundation, a first floor, a second floor, and, [**"all of a sudden, while you're building the third floor, the whole structure collapses."**](https://www.ted.com/talks/salman_khan_let_s_use_video_to_reinvent_education) **When you learn bottom up you end up with an understanding that can support more weight than one where ideas are just slabbed on. This allows you to build higher, and empowers you to break through to new levels. This is why people with a strong bottom-up understanding are so powerful: they're able to keep building up and up until they can finally stick their head above the clouds and reach game-changing new insights.** **Producing this head-above-the-clouds experience is part of what our work is all about.** Why don't people "get" Bitcoin and the movement it's spawned? Because they don't understand the foundations off of which it is built. Without understanding why this technology was created, its history and the problems it was created to solve, without knowing the names and the struggles of the people who created it, you'll have a weak understanding of what this movement is really about, and how you can wield its technology most effectively. >"Those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music."  If you don't understand these ideas you'll just be watching all the hackers-in-frenzy like they're at a silent disco and you've got no headphones. This technology marks a new acme and the opening of a new frontier in the quest that is human history. In order to hear the music you've got to know the story. ![](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTyRgeeKqhT93CM2attQtcUAor61q6JV9dqfcvMyi6zD8/image.png) [Novum Organum](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3a/Novum_Organum_1650.jpg/509px-Novum_Organum_1650.jpg) --- ### The Two Pillars There are two ideas that elucidate this better than any others. We call them the two pillars: digital signatures and hash functions. What's so special about the two pillars? They're the "crypto" in cryptocurrency. In order to understand them you need to understand what cryptography is, how it works, and why it is used. And for that you must go back to the very foundation of your education: the alphabet. There's [a whole 'nother way](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesar_cipher) of using the letters that most people never learn. And while it might be new to you, for some, it is [very, very old](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atbash). The journey there and back again is transformative. Cryptography is often defined as the art of secure communication in the presence of adversaries. But during [the First CryptoWar](https://reason.com/archives/2013/03/12/the-second-great-crypto-war) the US Government tried to categorize cryptographic technology as munitions - weapons of war. A whole movement grew up around the argument that these ideas and their dissemination are protected speech, not weapons. But, true or not, this was a hack to ensure that the weapons made it into the hands of the masses. **Cryptography is a noble science: becoming aware of your vulnerability, the nakedness of your communications, is the first step in adopting the practice of self-defense. Learning about cryptography is like learning about the birds and the bees: once you cross the two pillars you've entered into a new way of knowing the world. People who do not understand these ideas are stuck outside.** #### The First Computer In the whole history of cryptography one episode stands out. It begins with one man's quest to know the infinite and culminates with the birth of the computer. At the end of the 19th Century the system of thought governing the Western Mind reached it's breaking point. George Cantor's reformulation of the foundation of mathematics, the counting numbers, introduced paradoxes which sparked a crisis and necessitated rebuilding mathematics bottom up. At first mathematicians tried to route these paradoxes out. But these holes in the system, were a way out. Humans unlike all the other machines in this Universe can dance through paradox and arrive at higher truth. "No door in the labyrinthine castle of science opens directly onto the Absolute. But if one understands the maze well enough, it is possible to jump out of the system and experience the Absolute for oneself." Cantor achieved something like a mathematical-mystical experience. You can't just read about it. You have to experience it. Cantor's insights formed the foundation that led step by step to the birth of the computer. In a sequence that's too much like the lines of a poem, Kurt Gödel, Alonzo Church, and Alan Turing all built on his work to answer fundamental questions and achieve cosmic insights, all crowned in 1936 with Turing's Theory of Computation: >"Turing figured out something entirely different . . . he figured out that mathematicians unlike carpenters only needed to have one tool in their toolbox, if it were the right sort of tool. Turing realized that it should be possible to build a meta-machine that could be reconfigured in such a way that it would do any task you could conceivably do with information. It would be a protean device that could turn into any tool you could ever need." But these were all proofs and essays. In order to defeat the Nazis, the Allies needed to make the machine a reality. Cryptography's best-known use case is the age-old application concealing military communications (ATTACK TOMORROW=>BUUBDL UPNPSSPX). In turn, cryptanalysis is the chiral art of cracking enemy codes. The history of cryptography is a centuries-long arms race. At each turn stronger and stronger encryption systems are matched by more and more powerful cryptanalysis techniques. But in order to crack the Nazi Lorenz and Enigma cyphers, the Allies needed a super-weapon that the world had never seen before: a computer.  According to Winston Churchill, perhaps the person best positioned to say, it was this bombe¹, not the other, that won the war. Cantor removed a lock from the mind and made all this possible by working bottom up. Cryptography is about more than just keeping secrets, it plays a key role at history's pivots. Mathematical Games can impact the lives of every person on the planet and determine the course of history. And the most important actions and forces driving history can be hidden . . . ![Turing Machine.png](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTAETCdBpduVKB7ifvvFPG9KBC8DiGt3BYL5BRcRNQ8dE/Turing%20Machine.png) #### Computer Revolution No one knew about the [cryptanalysis work done at Bletchley Park](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UK_LJvgfAf8) for decades after the War. Only the biggest governments and corporations had access to the new super-weapon. Worse, like any tool this new technology could be used for good or for evil. The computer was birthed to save the world from tyranny. But in the wrong hands - or too few hands - it could just as easily be the instrument of oppression. "The foundations [were] being laid for a dossier society, in which computers could be used to infer individuals' life-styles, habits, whereabouts, and associations from data collected in ordinary consumer transactions." After the War a generation of hackers recognized this threat and coalesced into [a movement](http://projects.csmonitor.com/cypherpunk) intent on disseminating the tools necessary to defeat Big Brother. "[T]here are monster computers lurking in big business and big government that know everything from what motels you've stayed at to how much money you have in the bank. But at Apple we're trying to balance the scales by giving individuals the kind of computer power once reserved for corporations." There's an elucidating saying: "Computers aren't the thing. They're the thing that gets us to the thing." #### Red Pill But the father of the personal computer revolution [didn't get it](https://www.ccn.com/apple-co-founder-steve-wozniak-flip-flops-on-blockchain-joins-crypto-startup/) [at first](https://cointelegraph.com/news/apples-steve-wozniak-co-founds-blockchain-focused-venture-capital-fund) either. Even the foremost evangelist of the movement didn't get it at first. ("When I first came across Bitcoin I didn't understand what it was, and [I] ignored it for 6 months." ~ Andreas Antonopolous). I ignored Bitcoin for 10 months before [someone](twitter.com/@chejazi) explained mining to me and my new life began. I went on to start what became the 5th largest Bitcoin exchange in the world. There are psychological and logistical roadblocks in the process of "getting it". We help people go over them. Without help you might end up wasting time thinking this is a scam, a fad, just some new asset class or application platform, rather than the movement of our time. I'd bet that this is why Warren Buffett doesn't "get" Bitcoin and its movement. It's as if somehow in his long career he never encountered cryptography. He probably thinks it's no better than PayPal. He can't hear the music. [Self-substantiation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Animatrix#%22Kid's_Story%22) is [rare](twitter.com/@passabilities) and it takes orders of magnitude more time. It's better and faster to have someone give you the red pill. This is not about learning how to analyze a new asset class or learning how to work with a new technology: it's about going from being asleep to being awake. This shift in consciousness is like a phase change. Our work is about helping people achieve this phase change. ![MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUHGqeSLRvAgPXHiFju75PyFdtLyD1QgYnwSuRGeNZZDm/MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg) [Red Pill or Blue Pill](https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-8a748ac5e99f6fc1916905c1bac73670) #### A New Language You might get the wrong idea, then, and think that working bottom up, means you should take your time or wait perhaps for some guru. But nothing could be farther from the truth. The way to learn this stuff is like the way to learn a language. We all know people who have studied a language for 12 years but can't speak it. They are not fluent. If a pot takes 12 minutes to boil and you put it on the burner for a minute, and take it off for a minute, then put it on for a minute, until it's been on for a sum total 12 minutes, you won't get boiled water. The pot has to be on for a continuous 12 minutes. The transition from not fluent to fluent, is a phase change, and like boiling, it is best achieved by a continuous application of whatever is driving the change. You don't learn a language by sitting at home watching videos. You learn it best through intensification - by being immersed with native speakers. Once you learn the Two Pillars you can put these building blocks together into higher crypto-systems: proof-of-work, mining, and the blockchain. These in turn form a basis for higher and higher abstractions. Soon enough you'll be swimming neck deep in the new vocabulary of a domain specific language (HODL, BUIDL, MOON) without a dictionary to save you. Don't understand one-way functions? Good luck understanding zk-snarks. We teach hash functions before we teach Merkle trees but it's the weight of Merkle trees that exposes a weak understanding of hash functions underneath: the best way to check for understanding is to apply more weight. If you learn bottom up you'll be like someone who actually knows the language rather than someone chocking together vocabulary they've overheard. You could say people with a bottom-up understanding are articulate but really the way they work is more like song than speech. If you want to understand where we stand today at the dawn of the Era of the Decentralized Computer and become fluent in this new language, it helps to understand something about languages in general, and one in particular . . . The birth of the computer opened a new canvas for experimentation. In the succeeding decades a myriad of programming languages emerged, each a new brush for painting on this new canvas. Out of these experiments Lisp stands alone. In 1958 John McCarthy "did for programming something like what Euclid did for geometry. He showed how, given a handful of simple operators and a notation for functions, you can build a whole programming language." Lisp is what you get when you try to build programming bottom up from axioms.  "Lisp is worth learning for the profound enlightenment experience you will have when you finally get it; that experience will make you a better programmer for the rest of your days, even if you never actually use Lisp itself a lot."  The way of thinking that working in Lisp induces is somehow more like the way humans were meant to think. But as when learning a language you can't just read about it, you have to experience it. Once you do, you may never go back.   >"Lisp has jokingly been called 'the most intelligent way to misuse a computer'. I think that description is a great compliment because it transmits the full flavor of liberation: it has assisted a number of our most gifted fellow humans in thinking previously impossible thoughts." Lisp demonstrates most effectively a pattern that should now be too sharp to ignore: axiomatization leads to acme, working bottom-up leads to new heights. Working bottom-up gives you wings: >"[W]ith Lisp our development cycle was so fast that . . . it must have seemed to our competitors that we had some kind of secret weapon - that we were decoding their Enigma traffic or something. In fact we did have a secret weapon, but it was simpler than they realized. No one was leaking news of their features to us. We were just able to develop software faster than anyone thought possible." >"These new possibilities do not stem from a single magic ingredient. In this respect, Lisp is like an arch. Which of the wedge-shaped stones (voussoirs) is the one that holds up the arch? The question itself is mistaken; they all do. Like an arch, Lisp is a collection of interlocking features." The metaphor of the arch should not be taken to imply that the material you are working with is rigid. Rather, it is abstraction into building blocks, succinct functional pieces, that allows you to build up and up to a succinct keystone point: like the tip of a sword, maximum force is concentrated over minimum area. This is why succinct speakers feel so penetrating - they get to the point. Succinctness is power. "I think most hackers know what it means for a language to feel restrictive. What's happening when you feel that? I think it's the same feeling you get when the street you want to take is blocked off, and you have to take a long detour to get where you wanted to go. There is something you want to say, and the language won't let you. What's really going on here, I think, is that a restrictive language is one that isn't succinct enough. The problem is not simply that you can't say what you planned to. It's that the detour the language makes you take is longer. Try this thought experiment. Suppose there were some program you wanted to write, and the language wouldn't let you express it the way you planned to, but instead forced you to write the program in some other way that was shorter. For me at least, that wouldn't feel very restrictive. It would be like the street you wanted to take being blocked off, and the policeman at the intersection directing you to a shortcut instead of a detour. Great! I think most (ninety percent?) of the feeling of restrictiveness comes from being forced to make the program you write in the language longer than one you have in your head."[5](paulgraham.com/power.html) #### Decentralized Computer Revolution The systems we live under are restrictive. They are meant, allegedly, to empower us, and to facilitate the common good. But they impede human progress and prevent the realization of human potential. Blockchain is a tool for breaking free from these systems and building new ones, starting first with the linchpin of them all: money. People act as if money actually does make the world go 'round - as if it is a part of nature, not a human invention. Life and death decisions are made on this basis. But the prisons we live in are the work of our own hands: they are human inventions. They cannot exist without us. We can only liberate ourselves by realizing we are our own jailers. We create and sustain these systems by participating in them and believing in them. Remembering this is the key to freeing ourselves: what restricts us, ultimately, is not lack of a tool, a language, or a medium of exchange, but a way of thinking. These prisons are prisons of the mind. In order to free ourselves we need to free our minds. Money is the largest check on human self-efficacy. Removing this check is the key to unlocking human potential. In this sense, this movement is about breaking money not making money. Satoshi's solution to this problem runs on human psychology: it is as much people-ware as it is software. Blockchain is a lever for shifting the world into a new way of thinking. By demonstrating that money can be reinvented, Bitcoin and its movement rewaken people to their essential capacity to create and transmit value. This shift in thinking is a shortening of the way to the world we want. Our work is about achieving this shift in thinking. The Decentralized Computer, like the first computer, is about moving forward to the next step in human destiny. That is clear when the technology is placed in its proper context. For just a moment you can start to hear all the lines in the human story come together. But our goal isn't just for you to hear the music - our goal is for you to join in song. At this critical juncture which will set the direction the movement takes, it's important for people to know: "education" which hides the foundations steals your power and prevents you from doing that. It leaves the lock on. **Don't let the suits get to you first.** ![matrixmeme.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUkKetUkWPTXXfsLvNr58EZvzwjCJ7cfLViuefGJNU4Zf/matrixmeme.jpg) [Wield the sword.](https://99bitcoins.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/MatrixBitcoin.jpg) Steve Jobs called the personal computer a bicycle for the mind. Blockchain is a sword. But how do you wield it? "Place a Samurai sword in the hands of a master and you'll be amazed at what he can do. A man like this on the dark path can do much harm as easily as a man like this on the light path can do much good. The sword can be used to destroy or protect, all depending on the hand that holds it. Place that sword in the hands of a baby and it will never be lifted off of the ground to do either. You now understand that it's not the sword but the hand that holds it. If it were the sword, a baby could defend itself from a Samurai warrior simply by having the same sword." We train people to wield the sword. Like the bombe, lisp, and the personal computer, this new technology is not merely a new tool. In order to make each of these advances the laws of thought had to be rewritten. In order to realize the true potential of this technology we have to rewrite the laws of thought en masse. Through education we strike at the point of maximum leverage - and remove the lock from the mind. At BitBox we're hunting for a recipe of key ideas for uptracking people from ordinary to extraordinary. This is why we teach bottom-up. This new technology is a weapon. A weapon for liberating our minds from old modes of thought which are prisons holding us to the ground when we are meant to fly.
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      "author": "kinnard",
      "body": "# Working Bottom Up\nWhy Warren Buffet Doesn't \"get\" Blockchain\n\n![Flammarion Woodcut](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmYAUo9w1v11C5UWveJveTdVUdWUx61Cb5mLPJLZFp3vjW/image.png)\n[By Houston Physicist](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flammarion_engraving#/media/File:Flammarion_Colored.jpg)\n\n\nWe believe blockchain technology and the movement it has spawned is the most important thing happening now, both for humanity collectively and for individual people. But this new technology is like a sword. First you must train your hands to use the sword. Our curriculum is designed to be the most effective way to learn, get up and running, and take flight. It is a sweeping survey history of numbers, the history of letters, and the history of human values. Each component builds up to the next. But this isn't just because it's necessary to understand underlying concepts first in order to understand the ones built on top of them. It's structured this way in order to achieve a certain effect. The whole way up you should be keenly aware that we're building toward something. We call this way, \"**working bottom up**\".\n\nPaul Graham elucidates this idea in the context of programing:\n>\"It's worth emphasizing that bottom-up design doesn't mean just writing the same program in a different order. When you work bottom-up, you usually end up with a different program. Instead of a single, monolithic program, you will get a larger language with more abstract operators, and a smaller program written in it. Instead of a lintel, you'll get an arch.\"[1](http://paulgraham.com/progbot.html)\n\nWhat's so special about working this way? It's more powerful.\n\n\"The biggest disadvantage to a post and lintel construction is the limited weight that can be held up, and the small distances[gaps] required between the posts. Ancient Roman architecture's development of the arch allowed for much larger structures to be constructed. The arcuated system spreads larger loads more effectively, and replaced the post and lintel trabeated system in most larger buildings and structures, until the introduction of steel girder beams in the industrial era.\"[2](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_and_lintel)\n\nUnderlying misconceptions or gaps in knowledge prevent you from building higher. Salman Khan describes it with the metaphor of building a house: \"I saw this in the early days working with my cousins. A lot of them were having trouble with math at first, because they had all of these gaps accumulated in their learning. [A]t some point they got to an algebra class and they might have been a little bit shaky on some of the pre-algebra, and because of that, they thought they didn't have the math gene. To appreciate how absurd that is, imagine if we did other things in our life that way. Say, home-building,\" you'd partially build a foundation, a first floor, a second floor, and, [**\"all of a sudden, while you're building the third floor, the whole structure collapses.\"**](https://www.ted.com/talks/salman_khan_let_s_use_video_to_reinvent_education)\n\n**When you learn bottom up you end up with an understanding that can support more weight than one where ideas are just slabbed on. This allows you to build higher, and empowers you to break through to new levels. This is why people with a strong bottom-up understanding are so powerful: they're able to keep building up and up until they can finally stick their head above the clouds and reach game-changing new insights.**\n\n**Producing this head-above-the-clouds experience is part of what our work is all about.**\n\nWhy don't people \"get\" Bitcoin and the movement it's spawned? Because they don't understand the foundations off of which it is built. Without understanding why this technology was created, its history and the problems it was created to solve, without knowing the names and the struggles of the people who created it, you'll have a weak understanding of what this movement is really about, and how you can wield its technology most effectively.\n>\"Those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music.\" \n\nIf you don't understand these ideas you'll just be watching all the hackers-in-frenzy like they're at a silent disco and you've got no headphones. This technology marks a new acme and the opening of a new frontier in the quest that is human history. In order to hear the music you've got to know the story.\n\n![](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTyRgeeKqhT93CM2attQtcUAor61q6JV9dqfcvMyi6zD8/image.png)\n[Novum Organum](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3a/Novum_Organum_1650.jpg/509px-Novum_Organum_1650.jpg)\n\n\n---\n### The Two Pillars\nThere are two ideas that elucidate this better than any others. We call them the two pillars: digital signatures and hash functions.\n\nWhat's so special about the two pillars? They're the \"crypto\" in cryptocurrency. In order to understand them you need to understand what cryptography is, how it works, and why it is used. And for that you must go back to the very foundation of your education: the alphabet. There's [a whole 'nother way](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesar_cipher) of using the letters that most people never learn. And while it might be new to you, for some, it is [very, very old](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atbash). The journey there and back again is transformative.\n\nCryptography is often defined as the art of secure communication in the presence of adversaries. But during [the First CryptoWar](https://reason.com/archives/2013/03/12/the-second-great-crypto-war) the US Government tried to categorize cryptographic technology as munitions - weapons of war. A whole movement grew up around the argument that these ideas and their dissemination are protected speech, not weapons. But, true or not, this was a hack to ensure that the weapons made it into the hands of the masses. **Cryptography is a noble science: becoming aware of your vulnerability, the nakedness of your communications, is the first step in adopting the practice of self-defense. Learning about cryptography is like learning about the birds and the bees: once you cross the two pillars you've entered into a new way of knowing the world. People who do not understand these ideas are stuck outside.**\n\n#### The First Computer\nIn the whole history of cryptography one episode stands out. It begins with one man's quest to know the infinite and culminates with the birth of the computer.\n\nAt the end of the 19th Century the system of thought governing the Western Mind reached it's breaking point. George Cantor's reformulation of the foundation of mathematics, the counting numbers, introduced paradoxes which sparked a crisis and necessitated rebuilding mathematics bottom up. At first mathematicians tried to route these paradoxes out. But these holes in the system, were a way out. Humans unlike all the other machines in this Universe can dance through paradox and arrive at higher truth. \"No door in the labyrinthine castle of science opens directly onto the Absolute. But if one understands the maze well enough, it is possible to jump out of the system and experience the Absolute for oneself.\" Cantor achieved something like a mathematical-mystical experience. You can't just read about it. You have to experience it.\n\nCantor's insights formed the foundation that led step by step to the birth of the computer. In a sequence that's too much like the lines of a poem, Kurt Gödel, Alonzo Church, and Alan Turing all built on his work to answer fundamental questions and achieve cosmic insights, all crowned in 1936 with Turing's Theory of Computation:\n>\"Turing figured out something entirely different . . . he figured out that mathematicians unlike carpenters only needed to have one tool in their toolbox, if it were the right sort of tool. Turing realized that it should be possible to build a meta-machine that could be reconfigured in such a way that it would do any task you could conceivably do with information. It would be a protean device that could turn into any tool you could ever need.\"\n\nBut these were all proofs and essays. In order to defeat the Nazis, the Allies needed to make the machine a reality. Cryptography's best-known use case is the age-old application concealing military communications (ATTACK TOMORROW=>BUUBDL UPNPSSPX). In turn, cryptanalysis is the chiral art of cracking enemy codes. The history of cryptography is a centuries-long arms race. At each turn stronger and stronger encryption systems are matched by more and more powerful cryptanalysis techniques. But in order to crack the Nazi Lorenz and Enigma cyphers, the Allies needed a super-weapon that the world had never seen before: a computer. \n\nAccording to Winston Churchill, perhaps the person best positioned to say, it was this bombe¹, not the other, that won the war. Cantor removed a lock from the mind and made all this possible by working bottom up.\nCryptography is about more than just keeping secrets, it plays a key role at history's pivots. Mathematical Games can impact the lives of every person on the planet and determine the course of history. And the most important actions and forces driving history can be hidden . . .\n![Turing Machine.png](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTAETCdBpduVKB7ifvvFPG9KBC8DiGt3BYL5BRcRNQ8dE/Turing%20Machine.png)\n\n#### Computer Revolution\n\nNo one knew about the [cryptanalysis work done at Bletchley Park](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UK_LJvgfAf8) for decades after the War. Only the biggest governments and corporations had access to the new super-weapon. Worse, like any tool this new technology could be used for good or for evil. The computer was birthed to save the world from tyranny. But in the wrong hands - or too few hands - it could just as easily be the instrument of oppression. \"The foundations [were] being laid for a dossier society, in which computers could be used to infer individuals' life-styles, habits, whereabouts, and associations from data collected in ordinary consumer transactions.\" \n\nAfter the War a generation of hackers recognized this threat and coalesced into [a movement](http://projects.csmonitor.com/cypherpunk) intent on disseminating the tools necessary to defeat Big Brother. \"[T]here are monster computers lurking in big business and big government that know everything from what motels you've stayed at to how much money you have in the bank. But at Apple we're trying to balance the scales by giving individuals the kind of computer power once reserved for corporations.\"\n\nThere's an elucidating saying: \"Computers aren't the thing. They're the thing that gets us to the thing.\"\n\n#### Red Pill\nBut the father of the personal computer revolution [didn't get it](https://www.ccn.com/apple-co-founder-steve-wozniak-flip-flops-on-blockchain-joins-crypto-startup/) [at first](https://cointelegraph.com/news/apples-steve-wozniak-co-founds-blockchain-focused-venture-capital-fund) either. Even the foremost evangelist of the movement didn't get it at first. (\"When I first came across Bitcoin I didn't understand what it was, and [I] ignored it for 6 months.\" ~ Andreas Antonopolous). I ignored Bitcoin for 10 months before [someone](twitter.com/@chejazi) explained mining to me and my new life began. I went on to start what became the 5th largest Bitcoin exchange in the world. There are psychological and logistical roadblocks in the process of \"getting it\". We help people go over them.\n\nWithout help you might end up wasting time thinking this is a scam, a fad, just some new asset class or application platform, rather than the movement of our time. I'd bet that this is why Warren Buffett doesn't \"get\" Bitcoin and its movement. It's as if somehow in his long career he never encountered cryptography. He probably thinks it's no better than PayPal. He can't hear the music.\n\n[Self-substantiation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Animatrix#%22Kid's_Story%22) is [rare](twitter.com/@passabilities) and it takes orders of magnitude more time. It's better and faster to have someone give you the red pill. This is not about learning how to analyze a new asset class or learning how to work with a new technology: it's about going from being asleep to being awake. This shift in consciousness is like a phase change. Our work is about helping people achieve this phase change.\n![MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUHGqeSLRvAgPXHiFju75PyFdtLyD1QgYnwSuRGeNZZDm/MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg)\n[Red Pill or Blue Pill](https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-8a748ac5e99f6fc1916905c1bac73670)\n\n#### A New Language\nYou might get the wrong idea, then, and think that working bottom up, means you should take your time or wait perhaps for some guru. But nothing could be farther from the truth. The way to learn this stuff is like the way to learn a language. We all know people who have studied a language for 12 years but can't speak it. They are not fluent. If a pot takes 12 minutes to boil and you put it on the burner for a minute, and take it off for a minute, then put it on for a minute, until it's been on for a sum total 12 minutes, you won't get boiled water. The pot has to be on for a continuous 12 minutes. The transition from not fluent to fluent, is a phase change, and like boiling, it is best achieved by a continuous application of whatever is driving the change. You don't learn a language by sitting at home watching videos. You learn it best through intensification - by being immersed with native speakers.\n\nOnce you learn the Two Pillars you can put these building blocks together into higher crypto-systems: proof-of-work, mining, and the blockchain. These in turn form a basis for higher and higher abstractions. Soon enough you'll be swimming neck deep in the new vocabulary of a domain specific language (HODL, BUIDL, MOON) without a dictionary to save you. Don't understand one-way functions? Good luck understanding zk-snarks. We teach hash functions before we teach Merkle trees but it's the weight of Merkle trees that exposes a weak understanding of hash functions underneath: the best way to check for understanding is to apply more weight. If you learn bottom up you'll be like someone who actually knows the language rather than someone chocking together vocabulary they've overheard. You could say people with a bottom-up understanding are articulate but really the way they work is more like song than speech.\n\nIf you want to understand where we stand today at the dawn of the Era of the Decentralized Computer and become fluent in this new language, it helps to understand something about languages in general, and one in particular . . .\nThe birth of the computer opened a new canvas for experimentation. In the succeeding decades a myriad of programming languages emerged, each a new brush for painting on this new canvas. Out of these experiments Lisp stands alone. In 1958 John McCarthy \"did for programming something like what Euclid did for geometry. He showed how, given a handful of simple operators and a notation for functions, you can build a whole programming language.\" Lisp is what you get when you try to build programming bottom up from axioms. \n\n\"Lisp is worth learning for the profound enlightenment experience you will have when you finally get it; that experience will make you a better programmer for the rest of your days, even if you never actually use Lisp itself a lot.\" \nThe way of thinking that working in Lisp induces is somehow more like the way humans were meant to think. But as when learning a language you can't just read about it, you have to experience it. Once you do, you may never go back.\n \n>\"Lisp has jokingly been called 'the most intelligent way to misuse a computer'. I think that description is a great compliment because it transmits the full flavor of liberation: it has assisted a number of our most gifted fellow humans in thinking previously impossible thoughts.\"\n\nLisp demonstrates most effectively a pattern that should now be too sharp to ignore: axiomatization leads to acme, working bottom-up leads to new heights. Working bottom-up gives you wings:\n>\"[W]ith Lisp our development cycle was so fast that . . . it must have seemed to our competitors that we had some kind of secret weapon - that we were decoding their Enigma traffic or something. In fact we did have a secret weapon, but it was simpler than they realized. No one was leaking news of their features to us. We were just able to develop software faster than anyone thought possible.\"\n\n\n>\"These new possibilities do not stem from a single magic ingredient. In this respect, Lisp is like an arch. Which of the wedge-shaped stones (voussoirs) is the one that holds up the arch? The question itself is mistaken; they all do. Like an arch, Lisp is a collection of interlocking features.\"\n\nThe metaphor of the arch should not be taken to imply that the material you are working with is rigid. Rather, it is abstraction into building blocks, succinct functional pieces, that allows you to build up and up to a succinct keystone point: like the tip of a sword, maximum force is concentrated over minimum area. This is why succinct speakers feel so penetrating - they get to the point. Succinctness is power. \"I think most hackers know what it means for a language to feel restrictive. What's happening when you feel that? I think it's the same feeling you get when the street you want to take is blocked off, and you have to take a long detour to get where you wanted to go. There is something you want to say, and the language won't let you.\nWhat's really going on here, I think, is that a restrictive language is one that isn't succinct enough. The problem is not simply that you can't say what you planned to. It's that the detour the language makes you take is longer. Try this thought experiment. Suppose there were some program you wanted to write, and the language wouldn't let you express it the way you planned to, but instead forced you to write the program in some other way that was shorter. For me at least, that wouldn't feel very restrictive. It would be like the street you wanted to take being blocked off, and the policeman at the intersection directing you to a shortcut instead of a detour. Great!\nI think most (ninety percent?) of the feeling of restrictiveness comes from being forced to make the program you write in the language longer than one you have in your head.\"[5](paulgraham.com/power.html)\n\n#### Decentralized Computer Revolution\nThe systems we live under are restrictive. They are meant, allegedly, to empower us, and to facilitate the common good. But they impede human progress and prevent the realization of human potential.\nBlockchain is a tool for breaking free from these systems and building new ones, starting first with the linchpin of them all: money. People act as if money actually does make the world go 'round - as if it is a part of nature, not a human invention. Life and death decisions are made on this basis. But the prisons we live in are the work of our own hands: they are human inventions. They cannot exist without us. We can only liberate ourselves by realizing we are our own jailers. We create and sustain these systems by participating in them and believing in them. Remembering this is the key to freeing ourselves: what restricts us, ultimately, is not lack of a tool, a language, or a medium of exchange, but a way of thinking. These prisons are prisons of the mind. In order to free ourselves we need to free our minds. Money is the largest check on human self-efficacy. Removing this check is the key to unlocking human potential. In this sense, this movement is about breaking money not making money. Satoshi's solution to this problem runs on human psychology: it is as much people-ware as it is software. Blockchain is a lever for shifting the world into a new way of thinking. By demonstrating that money can be reinvented, Bitcoin and its movement rewaken people to their essential capacity to create and transmit value. This shift in thinking is a shortening of the way to the world we want. Our work is about achieving this shift in thinking.\n\nThe Decentralized Computer, like the first computer, is about moving forward to the next step in human destiny. That is clear when the technology is placed in its proper context. For just a moment you can start to hear all the lines in the human story come together. But our goal isn't just for you to hear the music - our goal is for you to join in song. At this critical juncture which will set the direction the movement takes, it's important for people to know: \"education\" which hides the foundations steals your power and prevents you from doing that. It leaves the lock on. **Don't let the suits get to you first.**\n\n![matrixmeme.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUkKetUkWPTXXfsLvNr58EZvzwjCJ7cfLViuefGJNU4Zf/matrixmeme.jpg)\n[Wield the sword.](https://99bitcoins.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/MatrixBitcoin.jpg)\n\nSteve Jobs called the personal computer a bicycle for the mind. Blockchain is a sword. But how do you wield it? \"Place a Samurai sword in the hands of a master and you'll be amazed at what he can do. A man like this on the dark path can do much harm as easily as a man like this on the light path can do much good. The sword can be used to destroy or protect, all depending on the hand that holds it. Place that sword in the hands of a baby and it will never be lifted off of the ground to do either. You now understand that it's not the sword but the hand that holds it. If it were the sword, a baby could defend itself from a Samurai warrior simply by having the same sword.\" We train people to wield the sword.\n\nLike the bombe, lisp, and the personal computer, this new technology is not merely a new tool. In order to make each of these advances the laws of thought had to be rewritten. In order to realize the true potential of this technology we have to rewrite the laws of thought en masse. Through education we strike at the point of maximum leverage - and remove the lock from the mind. At BitBox we're hunting for a recipe of key ideas for uptracking people from ordinary to extraordinary. This is why we teach bottom-up.\n\nThis new technology is a weapon. A weapon for liberating our minds from old modes of thought which are prisons holding us to the ground when we are meant to fly.",
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2018/11/06 17:56:39
authorkinnard
permlinkworking-bottom-up-why-warren-buffett-doesn-t-get-blockchain
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2018/11/06 17:56:21
authorkinnard
body# Working Bottom Up Why Warren Buffet Doesn't "get" Blockchain ![Flammarion Woodcut](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmYAUo9w1v11C5UWveJveTdVUdWUx61Cb5mLPJLZFp3vjW/image.png) [By Houston Physicist](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flammarion_engraving#/media/File:Flammarion_Colored.jpg) We believe blockchain technology and the movement it has spawned is the most important thing happening now, both for humanity collectively and for individual people. But this new technology is like a sword. First you must train your hands to use the sword. Our curriculum is designed to be the most effective way to learn, get up and running, and take flight. It is a sweeping survey history of numbers, the history of letters, and the history of human values. Each component builds up to the next. But this isn't just because it's necessary to understand underlying concepts first in order to understand the ones built on top of them. It's structured this way in order to achieve a certain effect. The whole way up you should be keenly aware that we're building toward something. We call this way, "**working bottom up**". Paul Graham elucidates this idea in the context of programing: >"It's worth emphasizing that bottom-up design doesn't mean just writing the same program in a different order. When you work bottom-up, you usually end up with a different program. Instead of a single, monolithic program, you will get a larger language with more abstract operators, and a smaller program written in it. Instead of a lintel, you'll get an arch."[1](http://paulgraham.com/progbot.html) What's so special about working this way? It's more powerful. "The biggest disadvantage to a post and lintel construction is the limited weight that can be held up, and the small distances[gaps] required between the posts. Ancient Roman architecture's development of the arch allowed for much larger structures to be constructed. The arcuated system spreads larger loads more effectively, and replaced the post and lintel trabeated system in most larger buildings and structures, until the introduction of steel girder beams in the industrial era."[2](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_and_lintel) Underlying misconceptions or gaps in knowledge prevent you from building higher. Salman Khan describes it with the metaphor of building a house: "I saw this in the early days working with my cousins. A lot of them were having trouble with math at first, because they had all of these gaps accumulated in their learning. [A]t some point they got to an algebra class and they might have been a little bit shaky on some of the pre-algebra, and because of that, they thought they didn't have the math gene. To appreciate how absurd that is, imagine if we did other things in our life that way. Say, home-building," you'd partially build a foundation, a first floor, a second floor, and, [**"all of a sudden, while you're building the third floor, the whole structure collapses."**](https://www.ted.com/talks/salman_khan_let_s_use_video_to_reinvent_education) **When you learn bottom up you end up with an understanding that can support more weight than one where ideas are just slabbed on. This allows you to build higher, and empowers you to break through to new levels. This is why people with a strong bottom-up understanding are so powerful: they're able to keep building up and up until they can finally stick their head above the clouds and reach game-changing new insights.** **Producing this head-above-the-clouds experience is part of what our work is all about.** Why don't people "get" Bitcoin and the movement it's spawned? Because they don't understand the foundations off of which it is built. Without understanding why this technology was created, its history and the problems it was created to solve, without knowing the names and the struggles of the people who created it, you'll have a weak understanding of what this movement is really about, and how you can wield its technology most effectively. >"Those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music."  If you don't understand these ideas you'll just be watching all the hackers-in-frenzy like they're at a silent disco and you've got no headphones. This technology marks a new acme and the opening of a new frontier in the quest that is human history. In order to hear the music you've got to know the story. ![](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTyRgeeKqhT93CM2attQtcUAor61q6JV9dqfcvMyi6zD8/image.png) [Novum Organum](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3a/Novum_Organum_1650.jpg/509px-Novum_Organum_1650.jpg) --- ### The Two Pillars There are two ideas that elucidate this better than any others. We call them the two pillars: digital signatures and hash functions. What's so special about the two pillars? They're the "crypto" in cryptocurrency. In order to understand them you need to understand what cryptography is, how it works, and why it is used. And for that you must go back to the very foundation of your education: the alphabet. There's [a whole 'nother way](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesar_cipher) of using the letters that most people never learn. And while it might be new to you, for some, it is [very, very old](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atbash). The journey there and back again is transformative. Cryptography is often defined as the art of secure communication in the presence of adversaries. But during [the First CryptoWar](https://reason.com/archives/2013/03/12/the-second-great-crypto-war) the US Government tried to categorize cryptographic technology as munitions - weapons of war. A whole movement grew up around the argument that these ideas and their dissemination are protected speech, not weapons. But, true or not, this was a hack to ensure that the weapons made it into the hands of the masses. **Cryptography is a noble science: becoming aware of your vulnerability, the nakedness of your communications, is the first step in adopting the practice of self-defense. Learning about cryptography is like learning about the birds and the bees: once you cross the two pillars you've entered into a new way of knowing the world. People who do not understand these ideas are stuck outside.** #### The First Computer In the whole history of cryptography one episode stands out. It begins with one man's quest to know the infinite and culminates with the birth of the computer. At the end of the 19th Century the system of thought governing the Western Mind reached it's breaking point. George Cantor's reformulation of the foundation of mathematics, the counting numbers, introduced paradoxes which sparked a crisis and necessitated rebuilding mathematics bottom up. At first mathematicians tried to route these paradoxes out. But these holes in the system, were a way out. Humans unlike all the other machines in this Universe can dance through paradox and arrive at higher truth. "No door in the labyrinthine castle of science opens directly onto the Absolute. But if one understands the maze well enough, it is possible to jump out of the system and experience the Absolute for oneself." Cantor achieved something like a mathematical-mystical experience. You can't just read about it. You have to experience it. Cantor's insights formed the foundation that led step by step to the birth of the computer. In a sequence that's too much like the lines of a poem, Kurt Gödel, Alonzo Church, and Alan Turing all built on his work to answer fundamental questions and achieve cosmic insights, all crowned in 1936 with Turing's Theory of Computation: >"Turing figured out something entirely different . . . he figured out that mathematicians unlike carpenters only needed to have one tool in their toolbox, if it were the right sort of tool. Turing realized that it should be possible to build a meta-machine that could be reconfigured in such a way that it would do any task you could conceivably do with information. It would be a protean device that could turn into any tool you could ever need." But these were all proofs and essays. In order to defeat the Nazis, the Allies needed to make the machine a reality. Cryptography's best-known use case is the age-old application concealing military communications (ATTACK TOMORROW=>BUUBDL UPNPSSPX). In turn, cryptanalysis is the chiral art of cracking enemy codes. The history of cryptography is a centuries-long arms race. At each turn stronger and stronger encryption systems are matched by more and more powerful cryptanalysis techniques. But in order to crack the Nazi Lorenz and Enigma cyphers, the Allies needed a super-weapon that the world had never seen before: a computer.  According to Winston Churchill, perhaps the person best positioned to say, it was this bombe¹, not the other, that won the war. Cantor removed a lock from the mind and made all this possible by working bottom up. Cryptography is about more than just keeping secrets, it plays a key role at history's pivots. Mathematical Games can impact the lives of every person on the planet and determine the course of history. And the most important actions and forces driving history can be hidden . . . ![Turing Machine.png](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTAETCdBpduVKB7ifvvFPG9KBC8DiGt3BYL5BRcRNQ8dE/Turing%20Machine.png) #### Computer Revolution No one knew about the [cryptanalysis work done at Bletchley Park](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UK_LJvgfAf8) for decades after the War. Only the biggest governments and corporations had access to the new super-weapon. Worse, like any tool this new technology could be used for good or for evil. The computer was birthed to save the world from tyranny. But in the wrong hands - or too few hands - it could just as easily be the instrument of oppression. "The foundations [were] being laid for a dossier society, in which computers could be used to infer individuals' life-styles, habits, whereabouts, and associations from data collected in ordinary consumer transactions." After the War a generation of hackers recognized this threat and coalesced into [a movement](http://projects.csmonitor.com/cypherpunk) intent on disseminating the tools necessary to defeat Big Brother. "[T]here are monster computers lurking in big business and big government that know everything from what motels you've stayed at to how much money you have in the bank. But at Apple we're trying to balance the scales by giving individuals the kind of computer power once reserved for corporations." There's an elucidating saying: "Computers aren't the thing. They're the thing that gets us to the thing." #### Red Pill But the father of the personal computer revolution [didn't get it](https://www.ccn.com/apple-co-founder-steve-wozniak-flip-flops-on-blockchain-joins-crypto-startup/) [at first](https://cointelegraph.com/news/apples-steve-wozniak-co-founds-blockchain-focused-venture-capital-fund) either. Even the foremost evangelist of the movement didn't get it at first. ("When I first came across Bitcoin I didn't understand what it was, and [I] ignored it for 6 months." ~ Andreas Antonopolous). I ignored Bitcoin for 10 months before [someone](twitter.com/@chejazi) explained mining to me and my new life began. I went on to start what became the 5th largest Bitcoin exchange in the world. There are psychological and logistical roadblocks in the process of "getting it". We help people go over them. Without help you might end up wasting time thinking this is a scam, a fad, just some new asset class or application platform, rather than the movement of our time. I'd bet that this is why Warren Buffett doesn't "get" Bitcoin and its movement. It's as if somehow in his long career he never encountered cryptography. He probably thinks it's no better than PayPal. He can't hear the music. [Self-substantiation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Animatrix#%22Kid's_Story%22) is [rare](twitter.com/@passabilities) and it takes orders of magnitude more time. It's better and faster to have someone give you the red pill. This is not about learning how to analyze a new asset class or learning how to work with a new technology: it's about going from being asleep to being awake. This shift in consciousness is like a phase change. Our work is about helping people achieve this phase change. ![MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUHGqeSLRvAgPXHiFju75PyFdtLyD1QgYnwSuRGeNZZDm/MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg) [Red Pill or Blue Pill](https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-8a748ac5e99f6fc1916905c1bac73670) #### A New Language You might get the wrong idea, then, and think that working bottom up, means you should take your time or wait perhaps for some guru. But nothing could be farther from the truth. The way to learn this stuff is like the way to learn a language. We all know people who have studied a language for 12 years but can't speak it. They are not fluent. If a pot takes 12 minutes to boil and you put it on the burner for a minute, and take it off for a minute, then put it on for a minute, until it's been on for a sum total 12 minutes, you won't get boiled water. The pot has to be on for a continuous 12 minutes. The transition from not fluent to fluent, is a phase change, and like boiling, it is best achieved by a continuous application of whatever is driving the change. You don't learn a language by sitting at home watching videos. You learn it best through intensification - by being immersed with native speakers. Once you learn the Two Pillars you can put these building blocks together into higher crypto-systems: proof-of-work, mining, and the blockchain. These in turn form a basis for higher and higher abstractions. Soon enough you'll be swimming neck deep in the new vocabulary of a domain specific language (HODL, BUIDL, MOON) without a dictionary to save you. Don't understand one-way functions? Good luck understanding zk-snarks. We teach hash functions before we teach Merkle trees but it's the weight of Merkle trees that exposes a weak understanding of hash functions underneath: the best way to check for understanding is to apply more weight. If you learn bottom up you'll be like someone who actually knows the language rather than someone chocking together vocabulary they've overheard. You could say people with a bottom-up understanding are articulate but really the way they work is more like song than speech. If you want to understand where we stand today at the dawn of the Era of the Decentralized Computer and become fluent in this new language, it helps to understand something about languages in general, and one in particular . . . The birth of the computer opened a new canvas for experimentation. In the succeeding decades a myriad of programming languages emerged, each a new brush for painting on this new canvas. Out of these experiments Lisp stands alone. In 1958 John McCarthy "did for programming something like what Euclid did for geometry. He showed how, given a handful of simple operators and a notation for functions, you can build a whole programming language." Lisp is what you get when you try to build programming bottom up from axioms.  "Lisp is worth learning for the profound enlightenment experience you will have when you finally get it; that experience will make you a better programmer for the rest of your days, even if you never actually use Lisp itself a lot."  The way of thinking that working in Lisp induces is somehow more like the way humans were meant to think. But as when learning a language you can't just read about it, you have to experience it. Once you do, you may never go back.   >"Lisp has jokingly been called 'the most intelligent way to misuse a computer'. I think that description is a great compliment because it transmits the full flavor of liberation: it has assisted a number of our most gifted fellow humans in thinking previously impossible thoughts." Lisp demonstrates most effectively a pattern that should now be too sharp to ignore: axiomatization leads to acme, working bottom-up leads to new heights. Working bottom-up gives you wings: >"[W]ith Lisp our development cycle was so fast that . . . it must have seemed to our competitors that we had some kind of secret weapon - that we were decoding their Enigma traffic or something. In fact we did have a secret weapon, but it was simpler than they realized. No one was leaking news of their features to us. We were just able to develop software faster than anyone thought possible." >"These new possibilities do not stem from a single magic ingredient. In this respect, Lisp is like an arch. Which of the wedge-shaped stones (voussoirs) is the one that holds up the arch? The question itself is mistaken; they all do. Like an arch, Lisp is a collection of interlocking features." The metaphor of the arch should not be taken to imply that the material you are working with is rigid. Rather, it is abstraction into building blocks, succinct functional pieces, that allows you to build up and up to a succinct keystone point: like the tip of a sword, maximum force is concentrated over minimum area. This is why succinct speakers feel so penetrating - they get to the point. Succinctness is power. "I think most hackers know what it means for a language to feel restrictive. What's happening when you feel that? I think it's the same feeling you get when the street you want to take is blocked off, and you have to take a long detour to get where you wanted to go. There is something you want to say, and the language won't let you. What's really going on here, I think, is that a restrictive language is one that isn't succinct enough. The problem is not simply that you can't say what you planned to. It's that the detour the language makes you take is longer. Try this thought experiment. Suppose there were some program you wanted to write, and the language wouldn't let you express it the way you planned to, but instead forced you to write the program in some other way that was shorter. For me at least, that wouldn't feel very restrictive. It would be like the street you wanted to take being blocked off, and the policeman at the intersection directing you to a shortcut instead of a detour. Great! I think most (ninety percent?) of the feeling of restrictiveness comes from being forced to make the program you write in the language longer than one you have in your head."[5](paulgraham.com/power.html) #### Decentralized Computer Revolution The systems we live under are restrictive. They are meant, allegedly, to empower us, and to facilitate the common good. But they impede human progress and prevent the realization of human potential. Blockchain is a tool for breaking free from these systems and building new ones, starting first with the linchpin of them all: money. People act as if money actually does make the world go 'round - as if it is a part of nature, not a human invention. Life and death decisions are made on this basis. But the prisons we live in are the work of our own hands: they are human inventions. They cannot exist without us. We can only liberate ourselves by realizing we are our own jailers. We create and sustain these systems by participating in them and believing in them. Remembering this is the key to freeing ourselves: what restricts us, ultimately, is not lack of a tool, a language, or a medium of exchange, but a way of thinking. These prisons are prisons of the mind. In order to free ourselves we need to free our minds. Money is the largest check on human self-efficacy. Removing this check is the key to unlocking human potential. In this sense, this movement is about breaking money not making money. Satoshi's solution to this problem runs on human psychology: it is as much people-ware as it is software. Blockchain is a lever for shifting the world into a new way of thinking. By demonstrating that money can be reinvented, Bitcoin and its movement rewaken people to their essential capacity to create and transmit value. This shift in thinking is a shortening of the way to the world we want. Our work is about achieving this shift in thinking. The Decentralized Computer, like the first computer, is about moving forward to the next step in human destiny. That is clear when the technology is placed in its proper context. For just a moment you can start to hear all the lines in the human story come together. But our goal isn't just for you to hear the music - our goal is for you to join in song. At this critical juncture which will set the direction the movement takes, it's important for people to know: "education" which hides the foundations steals your power and prevents you from doing that. It leaves the lock on. **Don't let the suits get to you first.** ![matrixmeme.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUkKetUkWPTXXfsLvNr58EZvzwjCJ7cfLViuefGJNU4Zf/matrixmeme.jpg) [Wield the sword.](https://99bitcoins.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/MatrixBitcoin.jpg) Steve Jobs called the personal computer a bicycle for the mind. Blockchain is a sword. But how do you wield it? "Place a Samurai sword in the hands of a master and you'll be amazed at what he can do. A man like this on the dark path can do much harm as easily as a man like this on the light path can do much good. The sword can be used to destroy or protect, all depending on the hand that holds it. Place that sword in the hands of a baby and it will never be lifted off of the ground to do either. You now understand that it's not the sword but the hand that holds it. If it were the sword, a baby could defend itself from a Samurai warrior simply by having the same sword." We train people to wield the sword. Like the bombe, lisp, and the personal computer, this new technology is not merely a new tool. In order to make each of these advances the laws of thought had to be rewritten. In order to realize the true potential of this technology we have to rewrite the laws of thought en masse. Through education we strike at the point of maximum leverage - and remove the lock from the mind. At BitBox we're hunting for a recipe of key ideas for uptracking people from ordinary to extraordinary. This is why we teach bottom-up. This new technology is a weapon. A weapon for liberating our minds from old modes of thought which are prisons holding us to the ground when we are meant to fly.
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      "author": "kinnard",
      "body": "# Working Bottom Up\nWhy Warren Buffet Doesn't \"get\" Blockchain\n\n![Flammarion Woodcut](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmYAUo9w1v11C5UWveJveTdVUdWUx61Cb5mLPJLZFp3vjW/image.png)\n[By Houston Physicist](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flammarion_engraving#/media/File:Flammarion_Colored.jpg)\n\n\nWe believe blockchain technology and the movement it has spawned is the most important thing happening now, both for humanity collectively and for individual people. But this new technology is like a sword. First you must train your hands to use the sword. Our curriculum is designed to be the most effective way to learn, get up and running, and take flight. It is a sweeping survey history of numbers, the history of letters, and the history of human values. Each component builds up to the next. But this isn't just because it's necessary to understand underlying concepts first in order to understand the ones built on top of them. It's structured this way in order to achieve a certain effect. The whole way up you should be keenly aware that we're building toward something. We call this way, \"**working bottom up**\".\n\nPaul Graham elucidates this idea in the context of programing:\n>\"It's worth emphasizing that bottom-up design doesn't mean just writing the same program in a different order. When you work bottom-up, you usually end up with a different program. Instead of a single, monolithic program, you will get a larger language with more abstract operators, and a smaller program written in it. Instead of a lintel, you'll get an arch.\"[1](http://paulgraham.com/progbot.html)\n\nWhat's so special about working this way? It's more powerful.\n\n\"The biggest disadvantage to a post and lintel construction is the limited weight that can be held up, and the small distances[gaps] required between the posts. Ancient Roman architecture's development of the arch allowed for much larger structures to be constructed. The arcuated system spreads larger loads more effectively, and replaced the post and lintel trabeated system in most larger buildings and structures, until the introduction of steel girder beams in the industrial era.\"[2](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_and_lintel)\n\nUnderlying misconceptions or gaps in knowledge prevent you from building higher. Salman Khan describes it with the metaphor of building a house: \"I saw this in the early days working with my cousins. A lot of them were having trouble with math at first, because they had all of these gaps accumulated in their learning. [A]t some point they got to an algebra class and they might have been a little bit shaky on some of the pre-algebra, and because of that, they thought they didn't have the math gene. To appreciate how absurd that is, imagine if we did other things in our life that way. Say, home-building,\" you'd partially build a foundation, a first floor, a second floor, and, [**\"all of a sudden, while you're building the third floor, the whole structure collapses.\"**](https://www.ted.com/talks/salman_khan_let_s_use_video_to_reinvent_education)\n\n**When you learn bottom up you end up with an understanding that can support more weight than one where ideas are just slabbed on. This allows you to build higher, and empowers you to break through to new levels. This is why people with a strong bottom-up understanding are so powerful: they're able to keep building up and up until they can finally stick their head above the clouds and reach game-changing new insights.**\n\n**Producing this head-above-the-clouds experience is part of what our work is all about.**\n\nWhy don't people \"get\" Bitcoin and the movement it's spawned? Because they don't understand the foundations off of which it is built. Without understanding why this technology was created, its history and the problems it was created to solve, without knowing the names and the struggles of the people who created it, you'll have a weak understanding of what this movement is really about, and how you can wield its technology most effectively.\n>\"Those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music.\" \n\nIf you don't understand these ideas you'll just be watching all the hackers-in-frenzy like they're at a silent disco and you've got no headphones. This technology marks a new acme and the opening of a new frontier in the quest that is human history. In order to hear the music you've got to know the story.\n\n![](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTyRgeeKqhT93CM2attQtcUAor61q6JV9dqfcvMyi6zD8/image.png)\n[Novum Organum](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3a/Novum_Organum_1650.jpg/509px-Novum_Organum_1650.jpg)\n\n\n---\n### The Two Pillars\nThere are two ideas that elucidate this better than any others. We call them the two pillars: digital signatures and hash functions.\n\nWhat's so special about the two pillars? They're the \"crypto\" in cryptocurrency. In order to understand them you need to understand what cryptography is, how it works, and why it is used. And for that you must go back to the very foundation of your education: the alphabet. There's [a whole 'nother way](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesar_cipher) of using the letters that most people never learn. And while it might be new to you, for some, it is [very, very old](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atbash). The journey there and back again is transformative.\n\nCryptography is often defined as the art of secure communication in the presence of adversaries. But during [the First CryptoWar](https://reason.com/archives/2013/03/12/the-second-great-crypto-war) the US Government tried to categorize cryptographic technology as munitions - weapons of war. A whole movement grew up around the argument that these ideas and their dissemination are protected speech, not weapons. But, true or not, this was a hack to ensure that the weapons made it into the hands of the masses. **Cryptography is a noble science: becoming aware of your vulnerability, the nakedness of your communications, is the first step in adopting the practice of self-defense. Learning about cryptography is like learning about the birds and the bees: once you cross the two pillars you've entered into a new way of knowing the world. People who do not understand these ideas are stuck outside.**\n\n#### The First Computer\nIn the whole history of cryptography one episode stands out. It begins with one man's quest to know the infinite and culminates with the birth of the computer.\n\nAt the end of the 19th Century the system of thought governing the Western Mind reached it's breaking point. George Cantor's reformulation of the foundation of mathematics, the counting numbers, introduced paradoxes which sparked a crisis and necessitated rebuilding mathematics bottom up. At first mathematicians tried to route these paradoxes out. But these holes in the system, were a way out. Humans unlike all the other machines in this Universe can dance through paradox and arrive at higher truth. \"No door in the labyrinthine castle of science opens directly onto the Absolute. But if one understands the maze well enough, it is possible to jump out of the system and experience the Absolute for oneself.\" Cantor achieved something like a mathematical-mystical experience. You can't just read about it. You have to experience it.\n\nCantor's insights formed the foundation that led step by step to the birth of the computer. In a sequence that's too much like the lines of a poem, Kurt Gödel, Alonzo Church, and Alan Turing all built on his work to answer fundamental questions and achieve cosmic insights, all crowned in 1936 with Turing's Theory of Computation:\n>\"Turing figured out something entirely different . . . he figured out that mathematicians unlike carpenters only needed to have one tool in their toolbox, if it were the right sort of tool. Turing realized that it should be possible to build a meta-machine that could be reconfigured in such a way that it would do any task you could conceivably do with information. It would be a protean device that could turn into any tool you could ever need.\"\n\nBut these were all proofs and essays. In order to defeat the Nazis, the Allies needed to make the machine a reality. Cryptography's best-known use case is the age-old application concealing military communications (ATTACK TOMORROW=>BUUBDL UPNPSSPX). In turn, cryptanalysis is the chiral art of cracking enemy codes. The history of cryptography is a centuries-long arms race. At each turn stronger and stronger encryption systems are matched by more and more powerful cryptanalysis techniques. But in order to crack the Nazi Lorenz and Enigma cyphers, the Allies needed a super-weapon that the world had never seen before: a computer. \n\nAccording to Winston Churchill, perhaps the person best positioned to say, it was this bombe¹, not the other, that won the war. Cantor removed a lock from the mind and made all this possible by working bottom up.\nCryptography is about more than just keeping secrets, it plays a key role at history's pivots. Mathematical Games can impact the lives of every person on the planet and determine the course of history. And the most important actions and forces driving history can be hidden . . .\n![Turing Machine.png](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTAETCdBpduVKB7ifvvFPG9KBC8DiGt3BYL5BRcRNQ8dE/Turing%20Machine.png)\n\n#### Computer Revolution\n\nNo one knew about the [cryptanalysis work done at Bletchley Park](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UK_LJvgfAf8) for decades after the War. Only the biggest governments and corporations had access to the new super-weapon. Worse, like any tool this new technology could be used for good or for evil. The computer was birthed to save the world from tyranny. But in the wrong hands - or too few hands - it could just as easily be the instrument of oppression. \"The foundations [were] being laid for a dossier society, in which computers could be used to infer individuals' life-styles, habits, whereabouts, and associations from data collected in ordinary consumer transactions.\" \n\nAfter the War a generation of hackers recognized this threat and coalesced into [a movement](http://projects.csmonitor.com/cypherpunk) intent on disseminating the tools necessary to defeat Big Brother. \"[T]here are monster computers lurking in big business and big government that know everything from what motels you've stayed at to how much money you have in the bank. But at Apple we're trying to balance the scales by giving individuals the kind of computer power once reserved for corporations.\"\n\nThere's an elucidating saying: \"Computers aren't the thing. They're the thing that gets us to the thing.\"\n\n#### Red Pill\nBut the father of the personal computer revolution [didn't get it](https://www.ccn.com/apple-co-founder-steve-wozniak-flip-flops-on-blockchain-joins-crypto-startup/) [at first](https://cointelegraph.com/news/apples-steve-wozniak-co-founds-blockchain-focused-venture-capital-fund) either. Even the foremost evangelist of the movement didn't get it at first. (\"When I first came across Bitcoin I didn't understand what it was, and [I] ignored it for 6 months.\" ~ Andreas Antonopolous). I ignored Bitcoin for 10 months before [someone](twitter.com/@chejazi) explained mining to me and my new life began. I went on to start what became the 5th largest Bitcoin exchange in the world. There are psychological and logistical roadblocks in the process of \"getting it\". We help people go over them.\n\nWithout help you might end up wasting time thinking this is a scam, a fad, just some new asset class or application platform, rather than the movement of our time. I'd bet that this is why Warren Buffett doesn't \"get\" Bitcoin and its movement. It's as if somehow in his long career he never encountered cryptography. He probably thinks it's no better than PayPal. He can't hear the music.\n\n[Self-substantiation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Animatrix#%22Kid's_Story%22) is [rare](twitter.com/@passabilities) and it takes orders of magnitude more time. It's better and faster to have someone give you the red pill. This is not about learning how to analyze a new asset class or learning how to work with a new technology: it's about going from being asleep to being awake. This shift in consciousness is like a phase change. Our work is about helping people achieve this phase change.\n![MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUHGqeSLRvAgPXHiFju75PyFdtLyD1QgYnwSuRGeNZZDm/MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg)\n[Red Pill or Blue Pill](https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-8a748ac5e99f6fc1916905c1bac73670)\n\n#### A New Language\nYou might get the wrong idea, then, and think that working bottom up, means you should take your time or wait perhaps for some guru. But nothing could be farther from the truth. The way to learn this stuff is like the way to learn a language. We all know people who have studied a language for 12 years but can't speak it. They are not fluent. If a pot takes 12 minutes to boil and you put it on the burner for a minute, and take it off for a minute, then put it on for a minute, until it's been on for a sum total 12 minutes, you won't get boiled water. The pot has to be on for a continuous 12 minutes. The transition from not fluent to fluent, is a phase change, and like boiling, it is best achieved by a continuous application of whatever is driving the change. You don't learn a language by sitting at home watching videos. You learn it best through intensification - by being immersed with native speakers.\n\nOnce you learn the Two Pillars you can put these building blocks together into higher crypto-systems: proof-of-work, mining, and the blockchain. These in turn form a basis for higher and higher abstractions. Soon enough you'll be swimming neck deep in the new vocabulary of a domain specific language (HODL, BUIDL, MOON) without a dictionary to save you. Don't understand one-way functions? Good luck understanding zk-snarks. We teach hash functions before we teach Merkle trees but it's the weight of Merkle trees that exposes a weak understanding of hash functions underneath: the best way to check for understanding is to apply more weight. If you learn bottom up you'll be like someone who actually knows the language rather than someone chocking together vocabulary they've overheard. You could say people with a bottom-up understanding are articulate but really the way they work is more like song than speech.\n\nIf you want to understand where we stand today at the dawn of the Era of the Decentralized Computer and become fluent in this new language, it helps to understand something about languages in general, and one in particular . . .\nThe birth of the computer opened a new canvas for experimentation. In the succeeding decades a myriad of programming languages emerged, each a new brush for painting on this new canvas. Out of these experiments Lisp stands alone. In 1958 John McCarthy \"did for programming something like what Euclid did for geometry. He showed how, given a handful of simple operators and a notation for functions, you can build a whole programming language.\" Lisp is what you get when you try to build programming bottom up from axioms. \n\n\"Lisp is worth learning for the profound enlightenment experience you will have when you finally get it; that experience will make you a better programmer for the rest of your days, even if you never actually use Lisp itself a lot.\" \nThe way of thinking that working in Lisp induces is somehow more like the way humans were meant to think. But as when learning a language you can't just read about it, you have to experience it. Once you do, you may never go back.\n \n>\"Lisp has jokingly been called 'the most intelligent way to misuse a computer'. I think that description is a great compliment because it transmits the full flavor of liberation: it has assisted a number of our most gifted fellow humans in thinking previously impossible thoughts.\"\n\nLisp demonstrates most effectively a pattern that should now be too sharp to ignore: axiomatization leads to acme, working bottom-up leads to new heights. Working bottom-up gives you wings:\n>\"[W]ith Lisp our development cycle was so fast that . . . it must have seemed to our competitors that we had some kind of secret weapon - that we were decoding their Enigma traffic or something. In fact we did have a secret weapon, but it was simpler than they realized. No one was leaking news of their features to us. We were just able to develop software faster than anyone thought possible.\"\n\n\n>\"These new possibilities do not stem from a single magic ingredient. In this respect, Lisp is like an arch. Which of the wedge-shaped stones (voussoirs) is the one that holds up the arch? The question itself is mistaken; they all do. Like an arch, Lisp is a collection of interlocking features.\"\n\nThe metaphor of the arch should not be taken to imply that the material you are working with is rigid. Rather, it is abstraction into building blocks, succinct functional pieces, that allows you to build up and up to a succinct keystone point: like the tip of a sword, maximum force is concentrated over minimum area. This is why succinct speakers feel so penetrating - they get to the point. Succinctness is power. \"I think most hackers know what it means for a language to feel restrictive. What's happening when you feel that? I think it's the same feeling you get when the street you want to take is blocked off, and you have to take a long detour to get where you wanted to go. There is something you want to say, and the language won't let you.\nWhat's really going on here, I think, is that a restrictive language is one that isn't succinct enough. The problem is not simply that you can't say what you planned to. It's that the detour the language makes you take is longer. Try this thought experiment. Suppose there were some program you wanted to write, and the language wouldn't let you express it the way you planned to, but instead forced you to write the program in some other way that was shorter. For me at least, that wouldn't feel very restrictive. It would be like the street you wanted to take being blocked off, and the policeman at the intersection directing you to a shortcut instead of a detour. Great!\nI think most (ninety percent?) of the feeling of restrictiveness comes from being forced to make the program you write in the language longer than one you have in your head.\"[5](paulgraham.com/power.html)\n\n#### Decentralized Computer Revolution\nThe systems we live under are restrictive. They are meant, allegedly, to empower us, and to facilitate the common good. But they impede human progress and prevent the realization of human potential.\nBlockchain is a tool for breaking free from these systems and building new ones, starting first with the linchpin of them all: money. People act as if money actually does make the world go 'round - as if it is a part of nature, not a human invention. Life and death decisions are made on this basis. But the prisons we live in are the work of our own hands: they are human inventions. They cannot exist without us. We can only liberate ourselves by realizing we are our own jailers. We create and sustain these systems by participating in them and believing in them. Remembering this is the key to freeing ourselves: what restricts us, ultimately, is not lack of a tool, a language, or a medium of exchange, but a way of thinking. These prisons are prisons of the mind. In order to free ourselves we need to free our minds. Money is the largest check on human self-efficacy. Removing this check is the key to unlocking human potential. In this sense, this movement is about breaking money not making money. Satoshi's solution to this problem runs on human psychology: it is as much people-ware as it is software. Blockchain is a lever for shifting the world into a new way of thinking. By demonstrating that money can be reinvented, Bitcoin and its movement rewaken people to their essential capacity to create and transmit value. This shift in thinking is a shortening of the way to the world we want. Our work is about achieving this shift in thinking.\n\nThe Decentralized Computer, like the first computer, is about moving forward to the next step in human destiny. That is clear when the technology is placed in its proper context. For just a moment you can start to hear all the lines in the human story come together. But our goal isn't just for you to hear the music - our goal is for you to join in song. At this critical juncture which will set the direction the movement takes, it's important for people to know: \"education\" which hides the foundations steals your power and prevents you from doing that. It leaves the lock on. **Don't let the suits get to you first.**\n\n![matrixmeme.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUkKetUkWPTXXfsLvNr58EZvzwjCJ7cfLViuefGJNU4Zf/matrixmeme.jpg)\n[Wield the sword.](https://99bitcoins.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/MatrixBitcoin.jpg)\n\nSteve Jobs called the personal computer a bicycle for the mind. Blockchain is a sword. But how do you wield it? \"Place a Samurai sword in the hands of a master and you'll be amazed at what he can do. A man like this on the dark path can do much harm as easily as a man like this on the light path can do much good. The sword can be used to destroy or protect, all depending on the hand that holds it. Place that sword in the hands of a baby and it will never be lifted off of the ground to do either. You now understand that it's not the sword but the hand that holds it. If it were the sword, a baby could defend itself from a Samurai warrior simply by having the same sword.\" We train people to wield the sword.\n\nLike the bombe, lisp, and the personal computer, this new technology is not merely a new tool. In order to make each of these advances the laws of thought had to be rewritten. In order to realize the true potential of this technology we have to rewrite the laws of thought en masse. Through education we strike at the point of maximum leverage - and remove the lock from the mind. At BitBox we're hunting for a recipe of key ideas for uptracking people from ordinary to extraordinary. This is why we teach bottom-up.\n\nThis new technology is a weapon. A weapon for liberating our minds from old modes of thought which are prisons holding us to the ground when we are meant to fly.",
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      "permlink": "working-bottom-up-why-warren-buffett-doesn-t-get-blockchain",
      "title": "Working Bottom Up: why Warren Buffett Doesn't Get Blockchain"
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  "timestamp": "2018-11-06T17:56:21",
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2018/11/06 17:49:12
authorkinnard
body# Working Bottom Up Why Warren Buffet Doesn't "get" Blockchain ![Flammarion Woodcut](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmYAUo9w1v11C5UWveJveTdVUdWUx61Cb5mLPJLZFp3vjW/image.png) [By Houston Physicist](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flammarion_engraving#/media/File:Flammarion_Colored.jpg) We believe blockchain technology and the movement it has spawned is the most important thing happening now, both for humanity collectively and for individual people. But this new technology is like a sword. First you must train your hands to use the sword. Our curriculum is designed to be the most effective way to learn, get up and running, and take flight. It is a sweeping survey history of numbers, the history of letters, and the history of human values. Each component builds up to the next. But this isn't just because it's necessary to understand underlying concepts first in order to understand the ones built on top of them. It's structured this way in order to achieve a certain effect. The whole way up you should be keenly aware that we're building toward something. We call this way, "**working bottom up**". Paul Graham elucidates this idea in the context of programing: >"It's worth emphasizing that bottom-up design doesn't mean just writing the same program in a different order. When you work bottom-up, you usually end up with a different program. Instead of a single, monolithic program, you will get a larger language with more abstract operators, and a smaller program written in it. Instead of a lintel, you'll get an arch."[1](http://paulgraham.com/progbot.html) What's so special about working this way? It's more powerful. "The biggest disadvantage to a post and lintel construction is the limited weight that can be held up, and the small distances[gaps] required between the posts. Ancient Roman architecture's development of the arch allowed for much larger structures to be constructed. The arcuated system spreads larger loads more effectively, and replaced the post and lintel trabeated system in most larger buildings and structures, until the introduction of steel girder beams in the industrial era."[2](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_and_lintel) Underlying misconceptions or gaps in knowledge prevent you from building higher. Salman Khan describes it with the metaphor of building a house: "I saw this in the early days working with my cousins. A lot of them were having trouble with math at first, because they had all of these gaps accumulated in their learning. [A]t some point they got to an algebra class and they might have been a little bit shaky on some of the pre-algebra, and because of that, they thought they didn't have the math gene. To appreciate how absurd that is, imagine if we did other things in our life that way. Say, home-building," you'd partially build a foundation, a first floor, a second floor, and, [**"all of a sudden, while you're building the third floor, the whole structure collapses."**](https://www.ted.com/talks/salman_khan_let_s_use_video_to_reinvent_education) **When you learn bottom up you end up with an understanding that can support more weight than one where ideas are just slabbed on. This allows you to build higher, and empowers you to break through to new levels. This is why people with a strong bottom-up understanding are so powerful: they're able to keep building up and up until they can finally stick their head above the clouds and reach game-changing new insights.** **Producing this head-above-the-clouds experience is part of what our work is all about.** Why don't people "get" Bitcoin and the movement it's spawned? Because they don't understand the foundations off of which it is built. Without understanding why this technology was created, its history and the problems it was created to solve, without knowing the names and the struggles of the people who created it, you'll have a weak understanding of what this movement is really about, and how you can wield its technology most effectively. >"Those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music."  If you don't understand these ideas you'll just be watching all the hackers-in-frenzy like they're at a silent disco and you've got no headphones. This technology marks a new acme and the opening of a new frontier in the quest that is human history. In order to hear the music you've got to know the story. ![](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTyRgeeKqhT93CM2attQtcUAor61q6JV9dqfcvMyi6zD8/image.png) [Novum Organum](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3a/Novum_Organum_1650.jpg/509px-Novum_Organum_1650.jpg) --- ### The Two Pillars There are two ideas that elucidate this better than any others. We call them the two pillars: digital signatures and hash functions. What's so special about the two pillars? They're the "crypto" in cryptocurrency. In order to understand them you need to understand what cryptography is, how it works, and why it is used. And for that you must go back to the very foundation of your education: the alphabet. There's [a whole 'nother way](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesar_cipher) of using the letters that most people never learn. And while it might be new to you, for some, it is [very, very old](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atbash). The journey there and back again is transformative. Cryptography is often defined as the art of secure communication in the presence of adversaries. But during [the First CryptoWar](https://reason.com/archives/2013/03/12/the-second-great-crypto-war) the US Government tried to categorize cryptographic technology as munitions - weapons of war. A whole movement grew up around the argument that these ideas and their dissemination are protected speech, not weapons. But, true or not, this was a hack to ensure that the weapons made it into the hands of the masses. **Cryptography is a noble science: becoming aware of your vulnerability, the nakedness of your communications, is the first step in adopting the practice of self-defense. Learning about cryptography is like learning about the birds and the bees: once you cross the two pillars you've entered into a new way of knowing the world. People who do not understand these ideas are stuck outside.** #### The First Computer In the whole history of cryptography one episode stands out. It begins with one man's quest to know the infinite and culminates with the birth of the computer. At the end of the 19th Century the system of thought governing the Western Mind reached it's breaking point. George Cantor's reformulation of the foundation of mathematics, the counting numbers, introduced paradoxes which sparked a crisis and necessitated rebuilding mathematics bottom up. At first mathematicians tried to route these paradoxes out. But these holes in the system, were a way out. Humans unlike all the other machines in this Universe can dance through paradox and arrive at higher truth. "No door in the labyrinthine castle of science opens directly onto the Absolute. But if one understands the maze well enough, it is possible to jump out of the system and experience the Absolute for oneself." Cantor achieved something like a mathematical-mystical experience. You can't just read about it. You have to experience it. Cantor's insights formed the foundation that led step by step to the birth of the computer. In a sequence that's too much like the lines of a poem, Kurt Gödel, Alonzo Church, and Alan Turing all built on his work to answer fundamental questions and achieve cosmic insights, all crowned in 1936 with Turing's Theory of Computation: >"Turing figured out something entirely different . . . he figured out that mathematicians unlike carpenters only needed to have one tool in their toolbox, if it were the right sort of tool. Turing realized that it should be possible to build a meta-machine that could be reconfigured in such a way that it would do any task you could conceivably do with information. It would be a protean device that could turn into any tool you could ever need." But these were all proofs and essays. In order to defeat the Nazis, the Allies needed to make the machine a reality. Cryptography's best-known use case is the age-old application concealing military communications (ATTACK TOMORROW=>BUUBDL UPNPSSPX). In turn, cryptanalysis is the chiral art of cracking enemy codes. The history of cryptography is a centuries-long arms race. At each turn stronger and stronger encryption systems are matched by more and more powerful cryptanalysis techniques. But in order to crack the Nazi Lorenz and Enigma cyphers, the Allies needed a super-weapon that the world had never seen before: a computer.  According to Winston Churchill, perhaps the person best positioned to say, it was this bombe¹, not the other, that won the war. Cantor removed a lock from the mind and made all this possible by working bottom up. Cryptography is about more than just keeping secrets, it plays a key role at history's pivots. Mathematical Games can impact the lives of every person on the planet and determine the course of history. And the most important actions and forces driving history can be hidden . . . ![Turing Machine.png](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTAETCdBpduVKB7ifvvFPG9KBC8DiGt3BYL5BRcRNQ8dE/Turing%20Machine.png) #### Computer Revolution No one knew about the [cryptanalysis work done at Bletchley Park](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UK_LJvgfAf8) for decades after the War. Only the biggest governments and corporations had access to the new super-weapon. Worse, like any tool this new technology could be used for good or for evil. The computer was birthed to save the world from tyranny. But in the wrong hands - or too few hands - it could just as easily be the instrument of oppression. "The foundations [were] being laid for a dossier society, in which computers could be used to infer individuals' life-styles, habits, whereabouts, and associations from data collected in ordinary consumer transactions." After the War a generation of hackers recognized this threat and coalesced into [a movement](http://projects.csmonitor.com/cypherpunk) intent on disseminating the tools necessary to defeat Big Brother. "[T]here are monster computers lurking in big business and big government that know everything from what motels you've stayed at to how much money you have in the bank. But at Apple we're trying to balance the scales by giving individuals the kind of computer power once reserved for corporations." There's an elucidating saying: "Computers aren't the thing. They're the thing that gets us to the thing." #### Red Pill But the father of the personal computer revolution [didn't get it](https://www.ccn.com/apple-co-founder-steve-wozniak-flip-flops-on-blockchain-joins-crypto-startup/) [at first](https://cointelegraph.com/news/apples-steve-wozniak-co-founds-blockchain-focused-venture-capital-fund) either. Even the foremost evangelist of the movement didn't get it at first. ("When I first came across Bitcoin I didn't understand what it was, and [I] ignored it for 6 months." ~ Andreas Antonopolous). I ignored Bitcoin for 10 months before [someone](twitter.com/@chejazi) explained mining to me and my new life began. I went on to start what became the 5th largest Bitcoin exchange in the world. There are psychological and logistical roadblocks in the process of "getting it". We help people go over them. Without help you might end up wasting time thinking this is a scam, a fad, just some new asset class or application platform, rather than the movement of our time. I'd bet that this is why Warren Buffett doesn't "get" Bitcoin and its movement. It's as if somehow in his long career he never encountered cryptography. He probably thinks it's no better than PayPal. He can't hear the music. [Self-substantiation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Animatrix#%22Kid's_Story%22) is [rare](twitter.com/@passabilities) and it takes orders of magnitude more time. It's better and faster to have someone give you the red pill. This is not about learning how to analyze a new asset class or learning how to work with a new technology: it's about going from being asleep to being awake. This shift in consciousness is like a phase change. Our work is about helping people achieve this phase change. ![MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUHGqeSLRvAgPXHiFju75PyFdtLyD1QgYnwSuRGeNZZDm/MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg) [Red Pill or Blue Pill](https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-8a748ac5e99f6fc1916905c1bac73670) #### A New Language You might get the wrong idea, then, and think that working bottom up, means you should take your time or wait perhaps for some guru. But nothing could be farther from the truth. The way to learn this stuff is like the way to learn a language. We all know people who have studied a language for 12 years but can't speak it. They are not fluent. If a pot takes 12 minutes to boil and you put it on the burner for a minute, and take it off for a minute, then put it on for a minute, until it's been on for a sum total 12 minutes, you won't get boiled water. The pot has to be on for a continuous 12 minutes. The transition from not fluent to fluent, is a phase change, and like boiling, it is best achieved by a continuous application of whatever is driving the change. You don't learn a language by sitting at home watching videos. You learn it best through intensification - by being immersed with native speakers. Once you learn the Two Pillars you can put these building blocks together into higher crypto-systems: proof-of-work, mining, and the blockchain. These in turn form a basis for higher and higher abstractions. Soon enough you'll be swimming neck deep in the new vocabulary of a domain specific language (HODL, BUIDL, MOON) without a dictionary to save you. Don't understand one-way functions? Good luck understanding zk-snarks. We teach hash functions before we teach Merkle trees but it's the weight of Merkle trees that exposes a weak understanding of hash functions underneath: the best way to check for understanding is to apply more weight. If you learn bottom up you'll be like someone who actually knows the language rather than someone chocking together vocabulary they've overheard. You could say people with a bottom-up understanding are articulate but really the way they work is more like song than speech. If you want to understand where we stand today at the dawn of the Era of the Decentralized Computer and become fluent in this new language, it helps to understand something about languages in general, and one in particular . . . The birth of the computer opened a new canvas for experimentation. In the succeeding decades a myriad of programming languages emerged, each a new brush for painting on this new canvas. Out of these experiments Lisp stands alone. In 1958 John McCarthy "did for programming something like what Euclid did for geometry. He showed how, given a handful of simple operators and a notation for functions, you can build a whole programming language." Lisp is what you get when you try to build programming bottom up from axioms.  "Lisp is worth learning for the profound enlightenment experience you will have when you finally get it; that experience will make you a better programmer for the rest of your days, even if you never actually use Lisp itself a lot."  The way of thinking that working in Lisp induces is somehow more like the way humans were meant to think. But as when learning a language you can't just read about it, you have to experience it. Once you do, you may never go back.   >"Lisp has jokingly been called 'the most intelligent way to misuse a computer'. I think that description is a great compliment because it transmits the full flavor of liberation: it has assisted a number of our most gifted fellow humans in thinking previously impossible thoughts." Lisp demonstrates most effectively a pattern that should now be too sharp to ignore: axiomatization leads to acme, working bottom-up leads to new heights. Working bottom-up gives you wings: >"[W]ith Lisp our development cycle was so fast that . . . it must have seemed to our competitors that we had some kind of secret weapon - that we were decoding their Enigma traffic or something. In fact we did have a secret weapon, but it was simpler than they realized. No one was leaking news of their features to us. We were just able to develop software faster than anyone thought possible." >"These new possibilities do not stem from a single magic ingredient. In this respect, Lisp is like an arch. Which of the wedge-shaped stones (voussoirs) is the one that holds up the arch? The question itself is mistaken; they all do. Like an arch, Lisp is a collection of interlocking features." The metaphor of the arch should not be taken to imply that the material you are working with is rigid. Rather, it is abstraction into building blocks, succinct functional pieces, that allows you to build up and up to a succinct keystone point: like the tip of a sword, maximum force is concentrated over minimum area. This is why succinct speakers feel so penetrating - they get to the point. Succinctness is power. "I think most hackers know what it means for a language to feel restrictive. What's happening when you feel that? I think it's the same feeling you get when the street you want to take is blocked off, and you have to take a long detour to get where you wanted to go. There is something you want to say, and the language won't let you. What's really going on here, I think, is that a restrictive language is one that isn't succinct enough. The problem is not simply that you can't say what you planned to. It's that the detour the language makes you take is longer. Try this thought experiment. Suppose there were some program you wanted to write, and the language wouldn't let you express it the way you planned to, but instead forced you to write the program in some other way that was shorter. For me at least, that wouldn't feel very restrictive. It would be like the street you wanted to take being blocked off, and the policeman at the intersection directing you to a shortcut instead of a detour. Great! I think most (ninety percent?) of the feeling of restrictiveness comes from being forced to make the program you write in the language longer than one you have in your head."[5](paulgraham.com/power.html) #### Decentralized Computer Revolution The systems we live under are restrictive. They are meant, allegedly, to empower us, and to facilitate the common good. But they impede human progress and prevent the realization of human potential. Blockchain is a tool for breaking free from these systems and building new ones, starting first with the linchpin of them all: money. People act as if money actually does make the world go 'round - as if it is a part of nature, not a human invention. Life and death decisions are made on this basis. But the prisons we live in are the work of our own hands: they are human inventions. They cannot exist without us. We can only liberate ourselves by realizing we are our own jailers. We create and sustain these systems by participating in them and believing in them. Remembering this is the key to freeing ourselves: what restricts us, ultimately, is not lack of a tool, a language, or a medium of exchange, but a way of thinking. These prisons are prisons of the mind. In order to free ourselves we need to free our minds. Money is the largest check on human self-efficacy. Removing this check is the key to unlocking human potential. In this sense, this movement is about breaking money not making money. Satoshi's solution to this problem runs on human psychology: it is as much people-ware as it is software. Blockchain is a lever for shifting the world into a new way of thinking. By demonstrating that money can be reinvented, Bitcoin and its movement rewaken people to their essential capacity to create and transmit value. This shift in thinking is a shortening of the way to the world we want. Our work is about achieving this shift in thinking. The Decentralized Computer, like the first computer, is about moving forward to the next step in human destiny. That is clear when the technology is placed in its proper context. For just a moment you can start to hear all the lines in the human story come together. But our goal isn't just for you to hear the music - our goal is for you to join in song. At this critical juncture which will set the direction the movement takes, it's important for people to know: "education" which hides the foundations steals your power and prevents you from doing that. It leaves the lock on. **Don't let the suits get to you first.** ![matrixmeme.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUkKetUkWPTXXfsLvNr58EZvzwjCJ7cfLViuefGJNU4Zf/matrixmeme.jpg) [Wield the sword.](https://99bitcoins.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/MatrixBitcoin.jpg) Steve Jobs called the personal computer a bicycle for the mind. Blockchain is a sword. But how do you wield it? "Place a Samurai sword in the hands of a master and you'll be amazed at what he can do. A man like this on the dark path can do much harm as easily as a man like this on the light path can do much good. The sword can be used to destroy or protect, all depending on the hand that holds it. Place that sword in the hands of a baby and it will never be lifted off of the ground to do either. You now understand that it's not the sword but the hand that holds it. If it were the sword, a baby could defend itself from a Samurai warrior simply by having the same sword." We train people to wield the sword. Like the bombe, lisp, and the personal computer, this new technology is not merely a new tool. In order to make each of these advances the laws of thought had to be rewritten. In order to realize the true potential of this technology we have to rewrite the laws of thought en masse. Through education we strike at the point of maximum leverage - and remove the lock from the mind. At BitBox we're hunting for a recipe of key ideas for uptracking people from ordinary to extraordinary. This is why we teach bottom-up. This new technology is a weapon. A weapon for liberating our minds from old modes of thought which are prisons holding us to the ground when we are meant to fly.
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      "body": "# Working Bottom Up\nWhy Warren Buffet Doesn't \"get\" Blockchain\n\n![Flammarion Woodcut](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmYAUo9w1v11C5UWveJveTdVUdWUx61Cb5mLPJLZFp3vjW/image.png)\n[By Houston Physicist](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flammarion_engraving#/media/File:Flammarion_Colored.jpg)\n\n\nWe believe blockchain technology and the movement it has spawned is the most important thing happening now, both for humanity collectively and for individual people. But this new technology is like a sword. First you must train your hands to use the sword. Our curriculum is designed to be the most effective way to learn, get up and running, and take flight. It is a sweeping survey history of numbers, the history of letters, and the history of human values. Each component builds up to the next. But this isn't just because it's necessary to understand underlying concepts first in order to understand the ones built on top of them. It's structured this way in order to achieve a certain effect. The whole way up you should be keenly aware that we're building toward something. We call this way, \"**working bottom up**\".\n\nPaul Graham elucidates this idea in the context of programing:\n>\"It's worth emphasizing that bottom-up design doesn't mean just writing the same program in a different order. When you work bottom-up, you usually end up with a different program. Instead of a single, monolithic program, you will get a larger language with more abstract operators, and a smaller program written in it. Instead of a lintel, you'll get an arch.\"[1](http://paulgraham.com/progbot.html)\n\nWhat's so special about working this way? It's more powerful.\n\n\"The biggest disadvantage to a post and lintel construction is the limited weight that can be held up, and the small distances[gaps] required between the posts. Ancient Roman architecture's development of the arch allowed for much larger structures to be constructed. The arcuated system spreads larger loads more effectively, and replaced the post and lintel trabeated system in most larger buildings and structures, until the introduction of steel girder beams in the industrial era.\"[2](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_and_lintel)\n\nUnderlying misconceptions or gaps in knowledge prevent you from building higher. Salman Khan describes it with the metaphor of building a house: \"I saw this in the early days working with my cousins. A lot of them were having trouble with math at first, because they had all of these gaps accumulated in their learning. [A]t some point they got to an algebra class and they might have been a little bit shaky on some of the pre-algebra, and because of that, they thought they didn't have the math gene. To appreciate how absurd that is, imagine if we did other things in our life that way. Say, home-building,\" you'd partially build a foundation, a first floor, a second floor, and, [**\"all of a sudden, while you're building the third floor, the whole structure collapses.\"**](https://www.ted.com/talks/salman_khan_let_s_use_video_to_reinvent_education)\n\n**When you learn bottom up you end up with an understanding that can support more weight than one where ideas are just slabbed on. This allows you to build higher, and empowers you to break through to new levels. This is why people with a strong bottom-up understanding are so powerful: they're able to keep building up and up until they can finally stick their head above the clouds and reach game-changing new insights.**\n\n**Producing this head-above-the-clouds experience is part of what our work is all about.**\n\nWhy don't people \"get\" Bitcoin and the movement it's spawned? Because they don't understand the foundations off of which it is built. Without understanding why this technology was created, its history and the problems it was created to solve, without knowing the names and the struggles of the people who created it, you'll have a weak understanding of what this movement is really about, and how you can wield its technology most effectively.\n>\"Those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music.\" \n\nIf you don't understand these ideas you'll just be watching all the hackers-in-frenzy like they're at a silent disco and you've got no headphones. This technology marks a new acme and the opening of a new frontier in the quest that is human history. In order to hear the music you've got to know the story.\n\n![](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTyRgeeKqhT93CM2attQtcUAor61q6JV9dqfcvMyi6zD8/image.png)\n[Novum Organum](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3a/Novum_Organum_1650.jpg/509px-Novum_Organum_1650.jpg)\n\n\n---\n### The Two Pillars\nThere are two ideas that elucidate this better than any others. We call them the two pillars: digital signatures and hash functions.\n\nWhat's so special about the two pillars? They're the \"crypto\" in cryptocurrency. In order to understand them you need to understand what cryptography is, how it works, and why it is used. And for that you must go back to the very foundation of your education: the alphabet. There's [a whole 'nother way](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesar_cipher) of using the letters that most people never learn. And while it might be new to you, for some, it is [very, very old](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atbash). The journey there and back again is transformative.\n\nCryptography is often defined as the art of secure communication in the presence of adversaries. But during [the First CryptoWar](https://reason.com/archives/2013/03/12/the-second-great-crypto-war) the US Government tried to categorize cryptographic technology as munitions - weapons of war. A whole movement grew up around the argument that these ideas and their dissemination are protected speech, not weapons. But, true or not, this was a hack to ensure that the weapons made it into the hands of the masses. **Cryptography is a noble science: becoming aware of your vulnerability, the nakedness of your communications, is the first step in adopting the practice of self-defense. Learning about cryptography is like learning about the birds and the bees: once you cross the two pillars you've entered into a new way of knowing the world. People who do not understand these ideas are stuck outside.**\n\n#### The First Computer\nIn the whole history of cryptography one episode stands out. It begins with one man's quest to know the infinite and culminates with the birth of the computer.\n\nAt the end of the 19th Century the system of thought governing the Western Mind reached it's breaking point. George Cantor's reformulation of the foundation of mathematics, the counting numbers, introduced paradoxes which sparked a crisis and necessitated rebuilding mathematics bottom up. At first mathematicians tried to route these paradoxes out. But these holes in the system, were a way out. Humans unlike all the other machines in this Universe can dance through paradox and arrive at higher truth. \"No door in the labyrinthine castle of science opens directly onto the Absolute. But if one understands the maze well enough, it is possible to jump out of the system and experience the Absolute for oneself.\" Cantor achieved something like a mathematical-mystical experience. You can't just read about it. You have to experience it.\n\nCantor's insights formed the foundation that led step by step to the birth of the computer. In a sequence that's too much like the lines of a poem, Kurt Gödel, Alonzo Church, and Alan Turing all built on his work to answer fundamental questions and achieve cosmic insights, all crowned in 1936 with Turing's Theory of Computation:\n>\"Turing figured out something entirely different . . . he figured out that mathematicians unlike carpenters only needed to have one tool in their toolbox, if it were the right sort of tool. Turing realized that it should be possible to build a meta-machine that could be reconfigured in such a way that it would do any task you could conceivably do with information. It would be a protean device that could turn into any tool you could ever need.\"\n\nBut these were all proofs and essays. In order to defeat the Nazis, the Allies needed to make the machine a reality. Cryptography's best-known use case is the age-old application concealing military communications (ATTACK TOMORROW=>BUUBDL UPNPSSPX). In turn, cryptanalysis is the chiral art of cracking enemy codes. The history of cryptography is a centuries-long arms race. At each turn stronger and stronger encryption systems are matched by more and more powerful cryptanalysis techniques. But in order to crack the Nazi Lorenz and Enigma cyphers, the Allies needed a super-weapon that the world had never seen before: a computer. \n\nAccording to Winston Churchill, perhaps the person best positioned to say, it was this bombe¹, not the other, that won the war. Cantor removed a lock from the mind and made all this possible by working bottom up.\nCryptography is about more than just keeping secrets, it plays a key role at history's pivots. Mathematical Games can impact the lives of every person on the planet and determine the course of history. And the most important actions and forces driving history can be hidden . . .\n![Turing Machine.png](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmTAETCdBpduVKB7ifvvFPG9KBC8DiGt3BYL5BRcRNQ8dE/Turing%20Machine.png)\n\n#### Computer Revolution\n\nNo one knew about the [cryptanalysis work done at Bletchley Park](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UK_LJvgfAf8) for decades after the War. Only the biggest governments and corporations had access to the new super-weapon. Worse, like any tool this new technology could be used for good or for evil. The computer was birthed to save the world from tyranny. But in the wrong hands - or too few hands - it could just as easily be the instrument of oppression. \"The foundations [were] being laid for a dossier society, in which computers could be used to infer individuals' life-styles, habits, whereabouts, and associations from data collected in ordinary consumer transactions.\" \n\nAfter the War a generation of hackers recognized this threat and coalesced into [a movement](http://projects.csmonitor.com/cypherpunk) intent on disseminating the tools necessary to defeat Big Brother. \"[T]here are monster computers lurking in big business and big government that know everything from what motels you've stayed at to how much money you have in the bank. But at Apple we're trying to balance the scales by giving individuals the kind of computer power once reserved for corporations.\"\n\nThere's an elucidating saying: \"Computers aren't the thing. They're the thing that gets us to the thing.\"\n\n#### Red Pill\nBut the father of the personal computer revolution [didn't get it](https://www.ccn.com/apple-co-founder-steve-wozniak-flip-flops-on-blockchain-joins-crypto-startup/) [at first](https://cointelegraph.com/news/apples-steve-wozniak-co-founds-blockchain-focused-venture-capital-fund) either. Even the foremost evangelist of the movement didn't get it at first. (\"When I first came across Bitcoin I didn't understand what it was, and [I] ignored it for 6 months.\" ~ Andreas Antonopolous). I ignored Bitcoin for 10 months before [someone](twitter.com/@chejazi) explained mining to me and my new life began. I went on to start what became the 5th largest Bitcoin exchange in the world. There are psychological and logistical roadblocks in the process of \"getting it\". We help people go over them.\n\nWithout help you might end up wasting time thinking this is a scam, a fad, just some new asset class or application platform, rather than the movement of our time. I'd bet that this is why Warren Buffett doesn't \"get\" Bitcoin and its movement. It's as if somehow in his long career he never encountered cryptography. He probably thinks it's no better than PayPal. He can't hear the music.\n\n[Self-substantiation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Animatrix#%22Kid's_Story%22) is [rare](twitter.com/@passabilities) and it takes orders of magnitude more time. It's better and faster to have someone give you the red pill. This is not about learning how to analyze a new asset class or learning how to work with a new technology: it's about going from being asleep to being awake. This shift in consciousness is like a phase change. Our work is about helping people achieve this phase change.\n![MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUHGqeSLRvAgPXHiFju75PyFdtLyD1QgYnwSuRGeNZZDm/MatrixBluePillRedPill.jpg)\n[Red Pill or Blue Pill](https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-8a748ac5e99f6fc1916905c1bac73670)\n\n#### A New Language\nYou might get the wrong idea, then, and think that working bottom up, means you should take your time or wait perhaps for some guru. But nothing could be farther from the truth. The way to learn this stuff is like the way to learn a language. We all know people who have studied a language for 12 years but can't speak it. They are not fluent. If a pot takes 12 minutes to boil and you put it on the burner for a minute, and take it off for a minute, then put it on for a minute, until it's been on for a sum total 12 minutes, you won't get boiled water. The pot has to be on for a continuous 12 minutes. The transition from not fluent to fluent, is a phase change, and like boiling, it is best achieved by a continuous application of whatever is driving the change. You don't learn a language by sitting at home watching videos. You learn it best through intensification - by being immersed with native speakers.\n\nOnce you learn the Two Pillars you can put these building blocks together into higher crypto-systems: proof-of-work, mining, and the blockchain. These in turn form a basis for higher and higher abstractions. Soon enough you'll be swimming neck deep in the new vocabulary of a domain specific language (HODL, BUIDL, MOON) without a dictionary to save you. Don't understand one-way functions? Good luck understanding zk-snarks. We teach hash functions before we teach Merkle trees but it's the weight of Merkle trees that exposes a weak understanding of hash functions underneath: the best way to check for understanding is to apply more weight. If you learn bottom up you'll be like someone who actually knows the language rather than someone chocking together vocabulary they've overheard. You could say people with a bottom-up understanding are articulate but really the way they work is more like song than speech.\n\nIf you want to understand where we stand today at the dawn of the Era of the Decentralized Computer and become fluent in this new language, it helps to understand something about languages in general, and one in particular . . .\nThe birth of the computer opened a new canvas for experimentation. In the succeeding decades a myriad of programming languages emerged, each a new brush for painting on this new canvas. Out of these experiments Lisp stands alone. In 1958 John McCarthy \"did for programming something like what Euclid did for geometry. He showed how, given a handful of simple operators and a notation for functions, you can build a whole programming language.\" Lisp is what you get when you try to build programming bottom up from axioms. \n\n\"Lisp is worth learning for the profound enlightenment experience you will have when you finally get it; that experience will make you a better programmer for the rest of your days, even if you never actually use Lisp itself a lot.\" \nThe way of thinking that working in Lisp induces is somehow more like the way humans were meant to think. But as when learning a language you can't just read about it, you have to experience it. Once you do, you may never go back.\n \n>\"Lisp has jokingly been called 'the most intelligent way to misuse a computer'. I think that description is a great compliment because it transmits the full flavor of liberation: it has assisted a number of our most gifted fellow humans in thinking previously impossible thoughts.\"\n\nLisp demonstrates most effectively a pattern that should now be too sharp to ignore: axiomatization leads to acme, working bottom-up leads to new heights. Working bottom-up gives you wings:\n>\"[W]ith Lisp our development cycle was so fast that . . . it must have seemed to our competitors that we had some kind of secret weapon - that we were decoding their Enigma traffic or something. In fact we did have a secret weapon, but it was simpler than they realized. No one was leaking news of their features to us. We were just able to develop software faster than anyone thought possible.\"\n\n\n>\"These new possibilities do not stem from a single magic ingredient. In this respect, Lisp is like an arch. Which of the wedge-shaped stones (voussoirs) is the one that holds up the arch? The question itself is mistaken; they all do. Like an arch, Lisp is a collection of interlocking features.\"\n\nThe metaphor of the arch should not be taken to imply that the material you are working with is rigid. Rather, it is abstraction into building blocks, succinct functional pieces, that allows you to build up and up to a succinct keystone point: like the tip of a sword, maximum force is concentrated over minimum area. This is why succinct speakers feel so penetrating - they get to the point. Succinctness is power. \"I think most hackers know what it means for a language to feel restrictive. What's happening when you feel that? I think it's the same feeling you get when the street you want to take is blocked off, and you have to take a long detour to get where you wanted to go. There is something you want to say, and the language won't let you.\nWhat's really going on here, I think, is that a restrictive language is one that isn't succinct enough. The problem is not simply that you can't say what you planned to. It's that the detour the language makes you take is longer. Try this thought experiment. Suppose there were some program you wanted to write, and the language wouldn't let you express it the way you planned to, but instead forced you to write the program in some other way that was shorter. For me at least, that wouldn't feel very restrictive. It would be like the street you wanted to take being blocked off, and the policeman at the intersection directing you to a shortcut instead of a detour. Great!\nI think most (ninety percent?) of the feeling of restrictiveness comes from being forced to make the program you write in the language longer than one you have in your head.\"[5](paulgraham.com/power.html)\n\n#### Decentralized Computer Revolution\nThe systems we live under are restrictive. They are meant, allegedly, to empower us, and to facilitate the common good. But they impede human progress and prevent the realization of human potential.\nBlockchain is a tool for breaking free from these systems and building new ones, starting first with the linchpin of them all: money. People act as if money actually does make the world go 'round - as if it is a part of nature, not a human invention. Life and death decisions are made on this basis. But the prisons we live in are the work of our own hands: they are human inventions. They cannot exist without us. We can only liberate ourselves by realizing we are our own jailers. We create and sustain these systems by participating in them and believing in them. Remembering this is the key to freeing ourselves: what restricts us, ultimately, is not lack of a tool, a language, or a medium of exchange, but a way of thinking. These prisons are prisons of the mind. In order to free ourselves we need to free our minds. Money is the largest check on human self-efficacy. Removing this check is the key to unlocking human potential. In this sense, this movement is about breaking money not making money. Satoshi's solution to this problem runs on human psychology: it is as much people-ware as it is software. Blockchain is a lever for shifting the world into a new way of thinking. By demonstrating that money can be reinvented, Bitcoin and its movement rewaken people to their essential capacity to create and transmit value. This shift in thinking is a shortening of the way to the world we want. Our work is about achieving this shift in thinking.\n\nThe Decentralized Computer, like the first computer, is about moving forward to the next step in human destiny. That is clear when the technology is placed in its proper context. For just a moment you can start to hear all the lines in the human story come together. But our goal isn't just for you to hear the music - our goal is for you to join in song. At this critical juncture which will set the direction the movement takes, it's important for people to know: \"education\" which hides the foundations steals your power and prevents you from doing that. It leaves the lock on. **Don't let the suits get to you first.**\n\n![matrixmeme.jpg](https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmUkKetUkWPTXXfsLvNr58EZvzwjCJ7cfLViuefGJNU4Zf/matrixmeme.jpg)\n[Wield the sword.](https://99bitcoins.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/MatrixBitcoin.jpg)\n\nSteve Jobs called the personal computer a bicycle for the mind. Blockchain is a sword. But how do you wield it? \"Place a Samurai sword in the hands of a master and you'll be amazed at what he can do. A man like this on the dark path can do much harm as easily as a man like this on the light path can do much good. The sword can be used to destroy or protect, all depending on the hand that holds it. Place that sword in the hands of a baby and it will never be lifted off of the ground to do either. You now understand that it's not the sword but the hand that holds it. If it were the sword, a baby could defend itself from a Samurai warrior simply by having the same sword.\" We train people to wield the sword.\n\nLike the bombe, lisp, and the personal computer, this new technology is not merely a new tool. In order to make each of these advances the laws of thought had to be rewritten. In order to realize the true potential of this technology we have to rewrite the laws of thought en masse. Through education we strike at the point of maximum leverage - and remove the lock from the mind. At BitBox we're hunting for a recipe of key ideas for uptracking people from ordinary to extraordinary. This is why we teach bottom-up.\n\nThis new technology is a weapon. A weapon for liberating our minds from old modes of thought which are prisons holding us to the ground when we are meant to fly.",
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  "timestamp": "2018-01-09T06:41:03",
  "trx_id": "bc517b7783600d6bd7f6fefc250a1e4b0c01c817",
  "trx_in_block": 29,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/16 22:54:09
authorsteemitboard
bodyCongratulations @kinnard! You have completed some achievement on Steemit and have been rewarded with new badge(s) : [![](https://steemitimages.com/70x80/http://steemitboard.com/notifications/payout.png)](http://steemitboard.com/@kinnard) Award for the total payout received Click on any badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard. For more information about SteemitBoard, click [here](https://steemit.com/@steemitboard) If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word `STOP` > By upvoting this notification, you can help all Steemit users. Learn how [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/http-i-cubeupload-com-7ciqeo-png)!
json metadata{"image":["https://steemitboard.com/img/notifications.png"]}
parent authorkinnard
parent permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
permlinksteemitboard-notify-kinnard-20170716t225410000z
title
Transaction InfoBlock #13745722/Trx 00373cbdd917e405131f634b211188306547ab7f
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13745722,
  "op": [
    "comment",
    {
      "author": "steemitboard",
      "body": "Congratulations @kinnard! You have completed some achievement on Steemit and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :\n\n[![](https://steemitimages.com/70x80/http://steemitboard.com/notifications/payout.png)](http://steemitboard.com/@kinnard) Award for the total payout received\n\nClick on any badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard.\nFor more information about SteemitBoard, click [here](https://steemit.com/@steemitboard)\n\nIf you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word `STOP`\n\n> By upvoting this notification, you can help all Steemit users. Learn how [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/http-i-cubeupload-com-7ciqeo-png)!",
      "json_metadata": "{\"image\":[\"https://steemitboard.com/img/notifications.png\"]}",
      "parent_author": "kinnard",
      "parent_permlink": "black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed",
      "permlink": "steemitboard-notify-kinnard-20170716t225410000z",
      "title": ""
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-16T22:54:09",
  "trx_id": "00373cbdd917e405131f634b211188306547ab7f",
  "trx_in_block": 6,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
kinnardsent 51.420 SBD to @blocktrades- "3aa3c31e-e5e9-4336-92f4-fa753c33dee2"
2017/07/16 21:16:12
amount51.420 SBD
fromkinnard
memo3aa3c31e-e5e9-4336-92f4-fa753c33dee2
toblocktrades
Transaction InfoBlock #13743763/Trx 75efec3e470639c799ced7b5024464e93bcd372a
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13743763,
  "op": [
    "transfer",
    {
      "amount": "51.420 SBD",
      "from": "kinnard",
      "memo": "3aa3c31e-e5e9-4336-92f4-fa753c33dee2",
      "to": "blocktrades"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-16T21:16:12",
  "trx_id": "75efec3e470639c799ced7b5024464e93bcd372a",
  "trx_in_block": 12,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
kinnardclaimed reward balance: 51.429 SBD, 42.009 SP
2017/07/16 20:36:30
accountkinnard
reward sbd51.429 SBD
reward steem0.000 STEEM
reward vests68318.799742 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #13742969/Trx 59b9a9f4a30a05264005e400d777a3896894c3c7
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13742969,
  "op": [
    "claim_reward_balance",
    {
      "account": "kinnard",
      "reward_sbd": "51.429 SBD",
      "reward_steem": "0.000 STEEM",
      "reward_vests": "68318.799742 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-16T20:36:30",
  "trx_id": "59b9a9f4a30a05264005e400d777a3896894c3c7",
  "trx_in_block": 10,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/16 20:35:36
authorkwakuosei
permlinkmy-name-is-kwaku-osei-who-are-you
voterkinnard
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #13742951/Trx 97997d3416f0d0cd105c213dea02bbf8e539ca1f
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13742951,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kwakuosei",
      "permlink": "my-name-is-kwaku-osei-who-are-you",
      "voter": "kinnard",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-16T20:35:36",
  "trx_id": "97997d3416f0d0cd105c213dea02bbf8e539ca1f",
  "trx_in_block": 17,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/15 01:50:24
authorkinnard
permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed-20170704t000526032z
voterchrisczub
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #13691693/Trx c494dbe9f130f35f9d3cc4897c79d272da9d0267
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13691693,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
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      "permlink": "re-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed-20170704t000526032z",
      "voter": "chrisczub",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-15T01:50:24",
  "trx_id": "c494dbe9f130f35f9d3cc4897c79d272da9d0267",
  "trx_in_block": 1,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/15 01:50:21
authorkinnard
permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
voterchrisczub
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #13691692/Trx 7384bbc641203b42b8124598d324c6232161f9b8
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13691692,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed",
      "voter": "chrisczub",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-15T01:50:21",
  "trx_id": "7384bbc641203b42b8124598d324c6232161f9b8",
  "trx_in_block": 14,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/15 00:28:36
authorkinnard
permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
voterebadkhan6
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #13690062/Trx 6194fa0f8e4a3671428c36f70d6b197cfef1b785
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13690062,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed",
      "voter": "ebadkhan6",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-15T00:28:36",
  "trx_id": "6194fa0f8e4a3671428c36f70d6b197cfef1b785",
  "trx_in_block": 8,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/11 12:16:42
comment authoragoric.systems
comment permlinkwitness-campaign-agoric-systems-kindly-asks-you-for-your-vote-to-become-witness
curatorkinnard
reward2.067683 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #13589145/Virtual Operation #159
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13589145,
  "op": [
    "curation_reward",
    {
      "comment_author": "agoric.systems",
      "comment_permlink": "witness-campaign-agoric-systems-kindly-asks-you-for-your-vote-to-become-witness",
      "curator": "kinnard",
      "reward": "2.067683 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-11T12:16:42",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 159
}
2017/07/11 01:17:06
authorkinnard
permlinkre-robrigo-re-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t011704438z
sbd payout0.587 SBD
steem payout0.000 STEEM
vesting payout785.738899 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #13575961/Virtual Operation #8
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13575961,
  "op": [
    "author_reward",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "re-robrigo-re-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t011704438z",
      "sbd_payout": "0.587 SBD",
      "steem_payout": "0.000 STEEM",
      "vesting_payout": "785.738899 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-11T01:17:06",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 8
}
2017/07/11 00:18:48
authorkinnard
permlinkre-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t001849263z
sbd payout0.448 SBD
steem payout0.000 STEEM
vesting payout599.644145 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #13574795/Virtual Operation #6
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13574795,
  "op": [
    "author_reward",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t001849263z",
      "sbd_payout": "0.448 SBD",
      "steem_payout": "0.000 STEEM",
      "vesting_payout": "599.644145 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-11T00:18:48",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 6
}
2017/07/11 00:08:33
authorkinnard
permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z
sbd payout41.867 SBD
steem payout0.000 STEEM
vesting payout55746.249407 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #13574590/Virtual Operation #14
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13574590,
  "op": [
    "author_reward",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "re-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z",
      "sbd_payout": "41.867 SBD",
      "steem_payout": "0.000 STEEM",
      "vesting_payout": "55746.249407 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-11T00:08:33",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 14
}
2017/07/11 00:05:27
authorkinnard
permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed-20170704t000526032z
sbd payout0.442 SBD
steem payout0.000 STEEM
vesting payout591.373485 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #13574528/Virtual Operation #3
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13574528,
  "op": [
    "author_reward",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "re-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed-20170704t000526032z",
      "sbd_payout": "0.442 SBD",
      "steem_payout": "0.000 STEEM",
      "vesting_payout": "591.373485 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-11T00:05:27",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 3
}
kinnardreceived 6.719 SBD, 5.414 SP author reward for @kinnard / black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
2017/07/10 20:34:18
authorkinnard
permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
sbd payout6.719 SBD
steem payout0.000 STEEM
vesting payout8804.503838 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #13570305/Virtual Operation #29
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13570305,
  "op": [
    "author_reward",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed",
      "sbd_payout": "6.719 SBD",
      "steem_payout": "0.000 STEEM",
      "vesting_payout": "8804.503838 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-10T20:34:18",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 29
}
2017/07/09 02:11:18
authorkinnard
permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z
voterwayfaraway
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #13519557/Trx 2a4b9016b49660c626b3730f853bdd41dc764b81
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13519557,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "re-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z",
      "voter": "wayfaraway",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-09T02:11:18",
  "trx_id": "2a4b9016b49660c626b3730f853bdd41dc764b81",
  "trx_in_block": 6,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/09 01:33:06
authorkinnard
permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z
votercryptolife1
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #13518793/Trx 731b73555a79b29c423dd3c19065795c1303a6a8
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13518793,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "re-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z",
      "voter": "cryptolife1",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-09T01:33:06",
  "trx_id": "731b73555a79b29c423dd3c19065795c1303a6a8",
  "trx_in_block": 22,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/09 01:25:15
authorkinnard
permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z
voterhackerwhacker
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #13518636/Trx 87b3a0ed471d73e3df64627ffb7e4bb638ac4c0b
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13518636,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "re-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z",
      "voter": "hackerwhacker",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-09T01:25:15",
  "trx_id": "87b3a0ed471d73e3df64627ffb7e4bb638ac4c0b",
  "trx_in_block": 14,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/06 08:33:03
authorkinnard
permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
voterpfunk
weight2500 (25.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #13441224/Trx 0d373d9ff13028da439b2a18e9f9c2f3b40d1bc0
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13441224,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed",
      "voter": "pfunk",
      "weight": 2500
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-06T08:33:03",
  "trx_id": "0d373d9ff13028da439b2a18e9f9c2f3b40d1bc0",
  "trx_in_block": 20,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/06 08:32:57
authorkinnard
permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z
voterpfunk
weight2500 (25.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #13441223/Trx 6f7c9134edc3fdf46f6b93dbf9d0896bc30c3755
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13441223,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "re-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z",
      "voter": "pfunk",
      "weight": 2500
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-06T08:32:57",
  "trx_id": "6f7c9134edc3fdf46f6b93dbf9d0896bc30c3755",
  "trx_in_block": 25,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/05 04:58:00
authorkinnard
permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
voterjaydebjana
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #13408204/Trx cad87c47892f647871ff615de9d2cfd97428cbe1
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13408204,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed",
      "voter": "jaydebjana",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-05T04:58:00",
  "trx_id": "cad87c47892f647871ff615de9d2cfd97428cbe1",
  "trx_in_block": 8,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/05 01:29:06
comment authormikej
comment permlinkre-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170628t012905111z
curatorkinnard
reward41.367896 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #13404028/Virtual Operation #3
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13404028,
  "op": [
    "curation_reward",
    {
      "comment_author": "mikej",
      "comment_permlink": "re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170628t012905111z",
      "curator": "kinnard",
      "reward": "41.367896 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-05T01:29:06",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 3
}
2017/07/04 18:49:36
authorkinnard
permlinkre-fingolfin-re-kinnard-re-fingolfin-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170627t184935796z
sbd payout0.377 SBD
steem payout0.000 STEEM
vesting payout481.943156 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #13396048/Virtual Operation #9
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13396048,
  "op": [
    "author_reward",
    {
      "author": "kinnard",
      "permlink": "re-fingolfin-re-kinnard-re-fingolfin-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170627t184935796z",
      "sbd_payout": "0.377 SBD",
      "steem_payout": "0.000 STEEM",
      "vesting_payout": "481.943156 VESTS"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-04T18:49:36",
  "trx_id": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000",
  "trx_in_block": 4294967295,
  "virtual_op": 9
}
kinnardvoted for witness @agoric.systems
2017/07/04 15:30:06
accountkinnard
approvetrue
witnessagoric.systems
Transaction InfoBlock #13392061/Trx cf18c2ffbdc7e81bcfc4e5ba6338fc1171a9cc2d
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13392061,
  "op": [
    "account_witness_vote",
    {
      "account": "kinnard",
      "approve": true,
      "witness": "agoric.systems"
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-04T15:30:06",
  "trx_id": "cf18c2ffbdc7e81bcfc4e5ba6338fc1171a9cc2d",
  "trx_in_block": 13,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
2017/07/04 15:26:00
authoragoric.systems
permlinkwitness-campaign-agoric-systems-kindly-asks-you-for-your-vote-to-become-witness
voterkinnard
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #13391979/Trx ce8643a86167af2ab51cfba601ae4247fe5a4dca
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "block": 13391979,
  "op": [
    "vote",
    {
      "author": "agoric.systems",
      "permlink": "witness-campaign-agoric-systems-kindly-asks-you-for-your-vote-to-become-witness",
      "voter": "kinnard",
      "weight": 10000
    }
  ],
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "timestamp": "2017-07-04T15:26:00",
  "trx_id": "ce8643a86167af2ab51cfba601ae4247fe5a4dca",
  "trx_in_block": 6,
  "virtual_op": 0
}
kinnardcustom json: follow
2017/07/04 15:25:33
idfollow
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2017/07/04 12:13:24
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permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
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2017/07/04 10:51:03
authorkinnard
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2017/07/04 09:28:09
authorkinnard
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2017/07/04 09:08:03
authorkinnard
permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
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2017/07/04 09:08:00
authorsteemitboard
bodyCongratulations @kinnard! You have completed some achievement on Steemit and have been rewarded with new badge(s) : [![](https://steemitimages.com/70x80/http://steemitboard.com/notifications/firstpayout.png)](http://steemitboard.com/@kinnard) You got your First payout Click on any badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard. For more information about SteemitBoard, click [here](https://steemit.com/@steemitboard) If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word `STOP` > By upvoting this notification, you can help all Steemit users. Learn how [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/http-i-cubeupload-com-7ciqeo-png)!
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2017/07/04 06:11:39
comment authorrobrigo
comment permlinkre-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170627t061139754z
curatorkinnard
reward4.136967 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #13380898/Virtual Operation #5
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2017/07/04 05:46:21
authorkinnard
permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
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2017/07/04 03:33:15
authorkinnard
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sbd payout0.492 SBD
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Transaction InfoBlock #13377733/Virtual Operation #4
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2017/07/04 01:17:06
authorkinnard
bodyThanks for your help @robrigo!!
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parent permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t001207250z
permlinkre-robrigo-re-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t011704438z
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2017/07/04 01:02:06
authorkinnard
permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
voterfingolfin
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2017/07/04 00:58:30
authorfingolfin
bodySorry your post was downvoted but the massive influx of plagiarism and identity theft lately leaves everyone thinking the worst of people. Glad to see you got your comment upvoted at least for an extra 40 bucks on top of what the post was making.
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permlinkre-kinnard-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t005830956z
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2017/07/04 00:54:57
authorrandowhale
bodyThis post received a 1.2% upvote from @randowhale thanks to @sandwich! For more information, [click here](https://steemit.com/steemit/@randowhale/introducing-randowhale-will-you-get-the-100-vote-give-it-a-shot)!
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permlinkre-black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed-20170704t005456
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2017/07/04 00:54:54
authorkinnard
permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
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2017/07/04 00:52:15
authorkinnard
permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
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2017/07/04 00:40:15
authorkinnard
permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
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2017/07/04 00:36:09
authorkinnard
permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z
voteradm
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2017/07/04 00:34:51
authorsteemcleaners
bodyThanks for vouching for him!
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parent permlinkdetroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub
permlinkre-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170703t221434554z
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Transaction InfoBlock #13374172/Trx cc5001bbb9eedc674622b3661a0a6545ad31d586
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2017/07/04 00:33:45
authorsteemcleaners
bodyEdit: Thanks for vouching for him. Might want to do an intro post.
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parent permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
permlinkre-kinnard-black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed-20170703t221458340z
title
Transaction InfoBlock #13374151/Trx ccfe85b38f7da91dec370692a5748b48333d5785
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2017/07/04 00:33:18
authorsteemcleaners
bodyThanks for vouching for him.
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parent authorkinnard
parent permlinkblack-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed
permlinkre-kinnard-black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed-20170703t221458340z
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Transaction InfoBlock #13374142/Trx e8e6a49e382f730a56008ae5beeebd2fb6012716
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2017/07/04 00:29:12
authorrobrigo
body@steemcleaners identity verification here!
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permlinkre-kinnard-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t002912615z
title
Transaction InfoBlock #13374060/Trx 49e3fbbe65bac83287fc81563af88c8e047009fd
View Raw JSON Data
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2017/07/04 00:28:42
authorkinnard
permlinkre-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t001849263z
voterrobrigo
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Transaction InfoBlock #13374050/Trx a86eeed60e3499c161794ee80176ebd9c0f2e51f
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2017/07/04 00:21:15
authorkinnard
permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-black-bitcoiners-bitcoin-has-failed-20170704t000526032z
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Transaction InfoBlock #13373901/Trx 2a3fccd8a871686cb402c9677ad05fa050de7c3b
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2017/07/04 00:19:39
authortwitterbot
body### ![Kinnardian](https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/849630789444567040/6b2GvdUw_normal.jpg) **[Kinnard Hockenhull](https://twitter.com/@Kinnardian/status/880113357579317251)** tweeted @ 28 Jun 2017 - 17:19 UTC > Just made my first [#steemit](https://twitter.com/search?q=%23steemit) post, [#detroitCoin](https://twitter.com/search?q=%23detroitCoin): [steemit.com/bitcoin/@kinna…](https://t.co/xatrzsHe8K) ###### *Disclaimer: I am just a bot trying to be helpful.*
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permlinkre-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t001849263z-20170704t001939
title
Transaction InfoBlock #13373869/Trx 902ac00f68212526af05e1748d0ae2410b24fdd3
View Raw JSON Data
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      "author": "twitterbot",
      "body": "### ![Kinnardian](https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/849630789444567040/6b2GvdUw_normal.jpg) **[Kinnard Hockenhull](https://twitter.com/@Kinnardian/status/880113357579317251)** tweeted @ 28 Jun 2017 - 17:19 UTC\n\n> Just made my first [#steemit](https://twitter.com/search?q=%23steemit) post, [#detroitCoin](https://twitter.com/search?q=%23detroitCoin): [steemit.com/bitcoin/@kinna…](https://t.co/xatrzsHe8K)\n\n\n###### *Disclaimer: I am just a bot trying to be helpful.*",
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2017/07/04 00:18:48
authorkinnard
bodyIn case anyone was wondering if I am the real Kinnard: https://twitter.com/Kinnardian/status/880113357579317251
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permlinkre-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t001849263z
title
Transaction InfoBlock #13373852/Trx 6bb7cc85c2795e2a1fb46c87ac311a8140ab903b
View Raw JSON Data
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2017/07/04 00:12:51
authorkinnard
permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z
voterrobrigo
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View Raw JSON Data
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2017/07/04 00:08:33
authorkinnard
bodyIt's my original work. I'm the founder of BitBox :)
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parent permlinkre-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170703t221434554z
permlinkre-steemcleaners-re-kinnard-detroitcoin-bitcoin-is-the-new-vehicle-currency-why-we-should-make-detroit-into-a-bitcoin-hub-20170704t000832331z
title
Transaction InfoBlock #13373647/Trx 3e7e3c8dc7daf6dedb7b0e5ad3c21c189b8a252f
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Account Metadata

POSTING JSON METADATA
profile{"profile_image":"https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/849630789444567040/6b2GvdUw_400x400.jpg"}
JSON METADATA
profile{"profile_image":"https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/849630789444567040/6b2GvdUw_400x400.jpg"}
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Auth Keys

Owner
Single Signature
Public Keys
STM5aV2Sf7voTQhWJXoCQxqomTrp1QCEUb44EMsAD8gxsVKMaZpbM1/1
Active
Single Signature
Public Keys
STM7rCWXBzbRneB6V5mG6iWp6qScpQ4C62iPBkEFHexn8B5Tj5BBx1/1
Posting
Single Signature
Public Keys
STM72zt1jKPofZDz25goHiCTQProefcP5McfbteqhCzmRMXz1wVxa1/1
Memo
STM6g9GnuEg2fNhoVNV3irbqgRJjawB2GQQK2iGSMbnDaJwdY6rDg
{
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}

Witness Votes

1 / 30
[
  "agoric.systems"
]