11/24/2019

I’m trying to decide if I will cover things like this at all in the future because it detracts from what I find interesting about cryptocurrency while at the same time portraying the main players as childish. Anyway, this happened and as you can see CZ is claiming it was the cause of the BTC price drop this week.

Vitalik was on Eric Weinstein’s Portal podcast. If you aren’t technical and are looking for a gentle introduction to Ethereum or the current cryptocurrency zeitgeist, this episode isn’t terrible. Eric approaches the interview from the perspective of someone who knows almost nothing about the space, even though he is clearly informed.

Everyone on the internet is roasting the design of the cybertruck. However, Tesla had zero chance of selling trucks in the existing truck market. The prototypical truck buyer is too entrenched in the make of truck that they purchase. I’ve overheard conversations at Thanksgiving dinner where the buyer of one make ribs the buyer of another as if they’re discussing their favorite football teams. Not only this but, I’d wager that the typical truck purchaser is not particularly aligned with Tesla’s brand. Tesla’s only chance to sell a truck model is to do something different from existing trucks and hope to get new truck buyers into the market.

That said, you could make an argument that Tesla shouldn’t be working on a truck at this stage of the company. But, I guess that’s why I’m not a billionaire.

This might be a pivot after the shift to KYC didn’t go well, or it may have been in the works since the beginning. Either way, it benefits customers and is an interesting idea.

People are always flabbergasted by the compensation great developers can command. Whether it did or didn’t happen, this is the sort of thing that happens when a company isn’t willing to pay top dollar for engineering talent.

Speaking of Disney+, this article about how Disney+ is not expected to affect Netflix subscriber numbers is an example of why I avoid businesses with high p/e ratios. It isn’t because the shares are necessarily over-priced but more likely that they’re affected by the psychology of the public. This is a problem because news that may or may not affect the business will likely adversely affect the stock price, meaning rationality is less present in the price.

I covered this briefly in a newsletter a few weeks ago. It looks like Amazon is moving forward with a lawsuit.

Initially, I couldn’t decide if some kind of Kafkaesque masquerade was occurring, or if it genuinely takes this long to hammer out legislation when I heard the Senate news. After hearing that the bill also passed Congress shortly after, I’m more inclined to believe that it just takes this long to write legislation. I’m partly ashamed at how bureaucratic legislation writing is and partly proud that the U.S. legislators are at least doing something about Hong Kong.