My four-year-old wanted to watch a movie about trains. 🚆 So now we're watching Atlas Shrugged. 😆
I just had lunch with an old friend of mine who is a class of early 2011 Bitcoiner. He is not on any social media. We had a great conversation about how far bitcoin has come and how crazy things are today. Stack friends. 🧡🧡
I just finished Richard Rhodes’ The Making of the Atomic Bomb. What a book—long and heavy, but I really enjoyed it. I already knew a lot about the Manhattan Project itself, but what stood out this time were the stories of the scientists as people. Seeing them not just as names in textbooks, but as real, human characters gave me a whole new appreciation. I’ve especially connected with Ernest Rutherford—an experimentalist at heart, like me. Reading about him brought me back to the joy I felt doing chemistry experiments as a teenager in my garage lab. So now I’ve picked up Rhodes’ full Rutherford biography, A Force of Nature, to dive deeper. Most of what became modern nuclear physics was uncovered well before the Manhattan Project—between 1910 and 1932—when Rutherford and his students were at the center of discovery. Reading about those experiments is reminding me why I fell in love with science in the first place.
Just published: Bitcoin ≠ Crypto: Why the Distinction Matters If you're trying to explain why Bitcoin stands apart from the rest of the crypto world—technically, economically, and culturally—this piece is for you. I tried my best to articulate some of these concepts to be shared and read by a broader audience.
This was my church this morning 🌄. It is some nice to have service outside! image
I am very excited to be traveling to Washington DC to attend the Bitcoin Policy Institute 2025 Summit!
Decided to have breakfast for dinner tonight and got to try this great new maple syrup I got from @Mapletrade. Absolutely delicious. Great flavors I've never gotten from stores bought syrup. 🥞