Yes, thank you too. Empowerment through lottery gambling, ah well.
Calculations on when to abort the process would not lead to a financial
loss. All very logical. I have an idea of who the winners of these deals
are.

2015-02-17 19:08 GMT+01:00 archytas <[email protected]>:

> In minimal definition the blockchain is very dull - a set of chained
> blocks forming a record.  At other basic levels it seeks fairness through
> technical means -
> https://fc14.ifca.ai/bitcoin/papers/bitcoin14_submission_10.pdf (the link
> is safe - you have to do 'advanced' and 'go ahead anyway).
>
> In principle, we could remove many mirrors of authority and 'costs' though
> the blockchain, replacing the current allocation class.
>
>
> On Tuesday, February 17, 2015 at 2:56:22 PM UTC, Gabby wrote:
>>
>> I am interested in empowerment tools. What is the blockchain technology,
>> Andrew? First what it is and then what is does, okay? Thanks.
>>
>> Am Dienstag, 17. Februar 2015 schrieb andrew vecsey :
>>
>>> I have been thinking about your post Niel.
>>> The internet connects people via their computers. That is very
>>> empowering. especially to the owners of centralized computers that offer
>>> porn, entertainment,  commerce and information. It is however the
>>> decentralized form of the internet that is truly empowering, enabling
>>> people globally to freely communicate and share information without the
>>> control of centralized powers.  The blockchain technology is the most
>>> empowering. It frees people to make money transactions without banks, legal
>>> transactions without lawyers, and allows people to vote and voice their
>>> opinions without politicians.
>>>
>>> On Friday, February 13, 2015 at 3:41:22 PM UTC+1, archytas wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Most of my use of the internet concerns researching pretty dire
>>>> academic papers and books through still largely restricted access.  It's
>>>> much cheaper than buying the stuff directly, particularly as 99% of what
>>>> shows up is dross.  I've played with the rest to find out what is there.
>>>> Search is a big plus compared with rooting through stuff in a university
>>>> library.  Now, much google search just turns up dross I don't want.
>>>>
>>>> In an academic project we are interested in what is on the net
>>>> generally - in terms of how much of general consciousness this represents.
>>>> Rational discussion is a tiny part of what is on the net.  Techies spend a
>>>> lot of time looking for cut and paste code and ways we might automate this
>>>> sweep.  There is a background idea that we are looking for new ways to do
>>>> 'expert knowledge' on the metaphor of people not being able to build cars
>>>> but able to drive them with a bit of training.  My own bad is 'big data' as
>>>> a new language that would bring a different speed to human discourse and
>>>> potentially control of the means of production.
>>>>
>>>> Lately, I'm interested in the lack of a business model for anything
>>>> except trash.  I can join a site where a couple of young women will send me
>>>> off-the-peg clothes on approval to ensure my sartorial elegance, though
>>>> don't.  There are plenty of interesting Moochs, but I don't have time.  I
>>>> bank n line and have the joy of never seeing a bank clerk. Shopping can be
>>>> done in the same manner as shops don't interest me at all.  My insurance
>>>> renewals are always 30% higher than I can get the same cover for via one of
>>>> the broker sites on the day.
>>>>
>>>> I do electronic teaching.  So I'm no longer racked by whatever diseases
>>>> undergraduate classes try to kill me with.  And I never see a boss or have
>>>> to attend a useless staff meeting, or have my classes flooded as the
>>>> students discover I'm an easier touch and tell jokes.  The work is more or
>>>> less pre-prepared and my timetable is not changed at ridiculous short
>>>> notice and I don't have to take time to teach kids from other classes, at
>>>> my door because they can't get anywhere with the guy supposed to help.
>>>>
>>>> I can watch television and films through illegal sites, but would
>>>> really prefer to pay for channels where I could select from much wider
>>>> material without packaging.  The current business model encourages loads of
>>>> channels with the same (usually old) dross, or stuff like Netflix with only
>>>> 1% I'd want to see and don't want to pay to support.  Sports channels
>>>> require me to pay for soccer I don't want.  Tony has done more for me in a
>>>> few minutes (neglecting his production time) than Sky Arts bores ever
>>>> could.  We lack a business model of actual choice.  With one, insanestream
>>>> news and other entertainment, the crap science pornography of the BBC,
>>>> Discovery and so on, would be things of my past.  In chronic business
>>>> terms, I wonder how they do market segmentation at all.  I am sick of Blue
>>>> Peter (kids programme here) presentation.
>>>>
>>>> One can imagine plenty of people like the best through this group
>>>> wanting something very different and something large enough not to be a
>>>> part of when time presses and so on.  Uber, properly supervised against
>>>> racist drivers, could bring very radical change - I meet few who can
>>>> explain why - though we have not yet worked out that technology could
>>>> massively reduce what we currently call work and planet burning.  In the
>>>> meantime we can't even set up a discussion group without Gabby (and
>>>> everyone really) worrying on the curtain shades.  Give us a twirl then
>>>> girl, like one of those doxies Bruce Forsythe used to encourage.  I can see
>>>> something of a business model, starting with Chris' 'attractors'.  The
>>>> eventual key is content for a sophisticated audience - remembering very few
>>>> people do education without any kind of accreditation pay-off and the means
>>>> to pay for organisation does not move easily from free.  Current strategies
>>>> are advertising and the begging bowl.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
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