Topics
-
- 0 replies
- 604 views
Via @allyversprille (Bloomberg) on Twitter, waiting on full article. Edit: full article here Treasury’s letter to Senators today expressed “ancillary parties who cannot get access to information that is useful to the IRS are not intended to be captured by the reporting requirements for brokers...” Huge news for those of us concerned about the language of the US infrastructure bill passed earlier this year. Pretty common sense stuff here, but you never know when it comes to the Treasury and IRS.
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
-
- 0 replies
- 456 views
VIDEO clip: https://gettr.com/post/psr17gf987 What you need to know: - In June 1985, then-President Ronald Reagan nominated William Bradford Reynolds to be associate attorney general of the United States - Joe Biden, who was a senator at the time, spoke about a court ruling concerning a Louisiana redistricting plan approved by Reynolds that was criticized for being biased against Black residents, Reuters reports - Biden read out parts of a memo addressed to Reynolds that contained racial slurs, Snopes reports "Biden was wielding the quote with the racist slur as evidence against Reynolds’ fitness for the position." — PolitiFact
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 0 replies
- 588 views
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 0 replies
- 272 views
Or maybe we should start calling it the "crypto bowl"? 😉
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 0 replies
- 293 views
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 8 replies
- 1k views
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 0 replies
- 647 views
Last reply by admin, -
- 35 replies
- 4k views
I am not an anti-vaxxer. I believe that almost all the current vaccine types intended for Covid-19 have been proven, at least in the short term, to do more good than harm for a select group of individuals who have not previously had the virus itself, and/or who have the typically identified comorbidities such as obesity, diabetes, advanced age, cancer, prior respiratory issues, etc. However, because these vaccines really can produce better outcomes for some, many people apparently do not understand why there should be any limitations on its use. The NYT has finally included some dissenting opinions about the efficacy of the vaccines (without ridiculing them) in a rec…
Last reply by Dmitar, -
- 5 replies
- 778 views
Last reply by Space Merchant, -
- 0 replies
- 494 views
Last reply by Mic Drop,
-
- 1 reply
- 463 views
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 0 replies
- 789 views
Yesterday, the Wormhole bridge one of Solana's biggest bridges lost $320m in a hack. Within hours, a trading desk Jump Capital agreed to replenish the entire amount so that the liquidations calamity is avoided. The loss of the peg due to the hack could have sent the network into cascading liquidations arising out of leveraged positions. In stepped a VC to save the day. The fact that VCs are ready to cover these kind of losses shows that the entire Solana "ecosystem" is just one big sham propped up by these same VCs. They dont want their baby to die just yet. Apparently Jump Capital owns a significant stake in Wormhole and is ready to sink such a huge amou…
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 11 replies
- 1.1k views
Last reply by Pudgy, -
- 4 replies
- 1.2k views
Today, snakes still have ‘vestigial legs’…. more evidence it really happened.
Last reply by Thinking, -
The Lockheed Martin Sikorsky-Boeing team completed mission profile flight tests for the Army's Future Long-Range Assault Aircraft (FLRAA) competition. "We fully demonstrated Defiant's ability to execute the FLRAA mission profile by flying 236 knots in level flight, then reducing thrust on the propulsor to rapidly decelerate as we approached the confined, and unimproved, landing zone," said Bill Fell, Defiant chief flight test pilot at Sikorsky and a retired U.S. Army Master aviator. A YouTube video released by "Team Defiant," dated Jan. 18, shows the helicopter flying at low-altitude operations in a wooded area at low-level speeds. It will fly soldiers and c…
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 11 replies
- 1.2k views
Bitcoin miners major costs are electricity and cooling afford buying the hardware. The miners are heavily invented to find the lowest possible cost of energy in existence. With an incentive to lower the costs of mining, they are pushing the limits of using renewable resources at damns, solar, and wind. Beyond renewables you’re beginning to see smart use of miners working with energy companies to convert natural gas that has been getting flared (burned) and instead converting it to power mining equipment. Does every miner do this? No. But it means that the industry is going to continue to push for renewables where the cost helps their business mode the most. …
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 3 replies
- 536 views
Do I need to have a Bitcoin wallet before using an ATM to purchase Bitcoin?
Last reply by Space Merchant, -
- 0 replies
- 517 views
This explanation seems completely new to me... I no longer see the gravity as some "force".
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 3 replies
- 1k views
No big deal.... nothing big is happening. 😉 Well, the S&P 500 (-10.47%) just joined Nasdaq (-15.41%) in formal correction territory this morning. The Dow (-8.22%) isn't too far behind. The façade is falling away.
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 2 replies
- 788 views
A "Chain Reaction Lab Technique" (not a "test") -- "used to amplify" -- "DNA Replication" -- "Can produce a billion copies" (of molecules) IN SHORT -- PCR CAN MAKE SOMETHING OUT OF ALMOST NOTHING! Once upon a time, in the peaceful and quiet town of Normieville, the crooked Mayor and his minions devised a plot to increase their power and raise taxes -- the pretext being to "fight crime" and protect the public. With crime virtually non-existe…
Last reply by Mic Drop,
-
- 0 replies
- 116 views
Last reply by Srecko Sostar, -
- 2 replies
- 635 views
Intel, the market leader in computer chip manufacturing, is on the brink of penetrating the bitcoin mining ASIC-making market to compete with the likes of Bitmain and Canaan, Tom’s Hardware first reported. The giant chip producer will present a new “Bonanza Mine” chip at the upcoming ISSCC conference, which according to conference information is an “ultra-low-voltage energy-efficient Bitcoin mining ASIC.” Intel’s bitcoin mining ASIC presentation at ISSCC on Feb. 23 — source: Tom’s Hardware 137D5B8E-D6AC-4668-B4AA-9B874A18636D.webp
Last reply by Pudgy, -
- 0 replies
- 731 views
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
Last reply by Mic Drop,
-
- 3 replies
- 747 views
The company said Tuesday that Argentines will be able to make bitcoin remittance payments, receive bitcoin tips on Twitter and use Strike's peer-to-peer transaction services. Argentina is the first step in a 2022 Latin American expansion that will include Brazil, Colombia and "other Latin American markets," the company added in a statement. The company launched its payment app in El Salvador last March. Strike is currently working with merchants, consumers and individuals in Argentina, according to the statement. So far, the company has launched initial integrations and activations in the southern city of San Martin de los Andes, located in Patagonia. …
Last reply by admin, -
- 0 replies
- 410 views
On your iPhone visit this link (after you register and your account is approved) Then select the icon on the bottom of the screen with an arrow pointing up The following should appear.... select "Add to Home Screen" You should then see the following: You can name it whatever you like... just don't change the URL in gray. Click "Add" on the upper right hand side. Resulting in an "app" on your Home Screen for this website as shown below. Enjoy!
Last reply by admin, -
- 1 reply
- 440 views
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
"There is very high stakes game theory at play here, whereby if bitcoin adoption increases, the countries that secure some bitcoin today will be better off competitively than their peers," Fidelity analysts wrote. "A small cost can be paid today as a hedge compared to a potentially much larger cost years in the future," they added. https://www.fidelitydigitalassets.com/articles/2021-trends-impact
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 0 replies
- 412 views
Last reply by Mic Drop, -
- 2 replies
- 909 views
I own an iPhone and I need to send $200 to a friend. I am wondering how people use Apple Pay to pay a friend? Any ideas?
Last reply by admin,