I have been using the Brave browser for months, and am a major supporter of the project. The intentions of Brave are the focus of my enthusiasm for the Brave project, and those that work harder than hard on the wonderful things that Brave does as a whole.

Then today, I found out about Liberty OS while browsing the internet. It is a beautiful Operating system, to say the least.

Liberty OS took me 35 minutes to completely setup. What amazes me, beyond an operating system taking 35 minutes to completely setup--Is the user-focused nature of Liberty OS, as can be seen within the Abstract of the Liberty OS whitepaper :

"Liberty OS is a lightweight, decentralized, crypto/security-oriented Operating System focused on accessibility, user privacy and ease of use. It features and easily usable installer which takes care of nearly everything during the installation; therefore, even people who lack the know-how are able to successfully install it".

Not only is Liberty developing a user-friendly experience from the ground-up--they're doing-so without a crowdfunding effort before hand in the form of an ICO. Its not common in the 'crypto' space to form a company, and functional product such as Liberty OS has, without already having completed an ICO/IEO process. This, to me only emphasizes the mission, integrity, and possibility that this project will be the mozilla firefox, chrome, or internet explorer of the future.

The following was taken from the Liberty OS whitepaper Abstract:

"Liberty OS comes with the most common crypto-wallets pre-installed and/or select-able to be installed during the installation process. Now that core development of Liverty OS is completed, Liberty Blockchain Technologies US aims to receive further funding to add additional developers and other team members, especially consultants and marketing experts, and continuously expand Liberty OS's capabilities and prevalence"

Do you want to learn more, and possibly join, and even download Liberty OS to give it a try? Click Here



Or https://www.libertyos.net/?p=4556 (bare link).

