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- All kidding aside, though, the best way to know where you fall in America’s class system is to pay attention to which part of Fussell’s book make you feel uncomfortably seen. When you cringe and say, “Oh gosh, how did he know?!” that’s when you’ve found your your people. [Mr. and Mrs. Psmith’s Bookshelf]
- This is the most common theory of Bitcoin, especially among
the cryptocurrency’s supporters (the most avid of whom are called
“maximalists”). In fact, this was the original idea of Bitcoin — it was
supposed to replace fiat currencies like the U.S. dollar. Generally,
money isn’t a very good investment. Even if money didn’t depreciate via
inflation, it still wouldn’t go up in value very fast — even if there
was steady deflation, the cash wouldn’t offer the returns of, say, the
stock market, or a house. Those things are risky, and thus their returns
will always be higher than that of cash. Instead, the case for really
spectacular Bitcoin returns is that Bitcoin is not now money, but will
eventually be money. If this is true, then demand for Bitcoin will
eventually be much, much, much higher than it is now, since people will
need it to buy everything. Higher demand will mean much higher
prices. In other words, the idea is that by buying Bitcoin now, you’re
getting in on the ground floor of the future currency of the land. [Noah Smith]
- Wyden is no shrinking violet when it comes to making big bets. His
fund is the single largest shareholder in Houston’s RCI Hospitality,
operator of over 40 gentlemen’s clubs and parent company of Rick’s
Cabaret. Wyden built his 10% position beginning in late April 2020, when
the coronavirus led investors to believe that in a world of masks and
social distancing, a company built on drunken bachelor parties and lap
dances was toast. But Wyden reckoned that as the pandemic ebbed there
would be pent-up demand for RCI’s clubs, many located in Florida and
Texas, and that they would reopen fast. Another plus: It’s exceedingly
difficult to obtain a strip club license, meaning the company has a deep
moat around its business. [Forbes]
- As
it happens, RICK fell seventy percent, and Wyden went maximally
contrarian, catching the falling knife on the belief that pent-up demand
would soon catapult the stock. And what initially looked like a doofus
move turned out to be genius. Within a year, RICK climbed sevenfold, and
Wyden’s fund assets increased to $350 million. His share? $100 million.
Now, knowing well that these newfound riches do get taxed at some
point, Wyden waved goodbye to NYC and fled to Miami, where he got busy
right away. He built a $4.1 million home, flipped it for a $1.4 million
profit, and then bought a larger, waterfront mansion for $13.88 million.
The thirty-seven-year-old hedge funder was on top of the world and
claimed in an interview with Forbes, “If I never raise another dollar
again, I’m going to become a multibillionaire.” [Waterboy Stocks]
- Similarly, in one of many, often repetitive, and laudatory (toward President Trump) but superfluous allegations, the pleader states, “‘The Apprentice’ represented the cultural magnitude of President Trump’s singular brilliance, which captured the [Z]eitgeist of our time.” [PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP v. NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY]
- There is something discomfiting about watching Rudy Giuliani perform “I’m a Little Teapot” for a few hundred dollars. Or George Santos, the disgraced congressman, filming wry videos on demand to mark birthdays or provide pep talks. But British politician Nigel Farage hasn’t just mastered the business of selling short video greetings on the Cameo website. He has turned it into one of the main planks in his campaign to become the U.K.’s next prime minister. [WSJ]
- In his 2008 book The Logic of Life, Tim Harford uses a slightly different phrase describing the uncorrupt in corrupt organizations with a similar meaning. "Your option to escape means you can’t be relied upon." I have seen this phenomenon in a number of different organizational situations that I and my family members have experienced throughout our lives. Organizations like employees who are dependent upon the organization. Thy fear independent employees. For example, I was rejected for the first civilian job I applied for: a real estate agent at a prestigious firm. They had an application that, to a large extent, was designed to determine how independent you were. The woman who interviewed me was unhappy, and said so, about my West Point education, significant savings account, the fact that I already owned rental property, and had no wife and kids to support. She frankly told me that the best salesmen were over a financial barrel, had nowhere else to turn, and had to hustle to pay their many bills. In other words, things I thought should be considered virtues were, instead, considered unattractive—simply because they put me in a position where I was able to resist the boss’s demands. [John T Reed]
- The maximal number of face turns needed to solve any instance of the Rubik's Cube is 20, and the maximal number of quarter turns is 26. These numbers are also the diameters of the corresponding Cayley graphs of the Rubik's Cube group. In STM (slice turn metric) the minimal number of turns is unknown, lower bound being 18 and upper bound being 20. [Optimal solutions for the Rubik's Cube]
- For anybody who’s been under a rock the last 5+ years, the writing is on the wall that Li batteries have won for hours-to-days and perhaps even days-to-weeks energy storage. Solar PV plus Li batteries are poised to change the world. The missing piece as everyone knows is in longer duration storage. But long duration energy storage is a fundamentally weak business. The money you make in energy storage is proportional to the number of times you get to sell energy per year, so as durations increase, profits dry up. Imagine a theoretical dirt cheap electrochemical battery made entirely of pig iron. You can approximate cost as CapEx per unit of energy / cycles * discount factor. Even if the battery were made out of the cheapest and most abundant metal on our planet you’d still be out of the money: ($0.35/kWh energy content of iron) / (1 cycle per year for 20 years) * 4.5 (15% discount rate) = meaningful arbitrage only with seasonal electricity price swings > $0.10/kWh. And of course real batteries cost much more than the constituent materials, don’t give back all of the energy you put in, and have other imperfections in proportion to how cheaply you make them... seasonal energy storage is hard! [Orca Sciences]
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