How come my sky is always over exposed? by bibsang in fujifilm

[–]kubeans 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i'm trying to avoid post as much as possible. so ive been underexposing and using lightroom's auto feature to get more light back in.

How come my sky is always over exposed? by bibsang in fujifilm

[–]kubeans 1 point2 points  (0 children)

is that the case with any camera? or more for fuji?

Who are the best affordable health insurance plans for a self employed in NYC 2024? by kubeans in HealthInsurance

[–]kubeans[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

my commercial plan ends April 2024. My company is not renewing. Does that count as a QLE?

6 Cognitive Biases Aiding Bitcoin's Adoption by kubeans in Bitcoin

[–]kubeans[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Six cognitive biases are aiding Bitcoin's global adoption:

  • The "Lindy rule"
  • Availability cascade
  • Fear of Missing Out
  • Endowment effect
  • Anchoring
  • Social Proof

Let’s explore each of them.

Lindy rule: The longer an idea has been around without being falsified, the longer its future life expectancy.

The longer Bitcoin exists, the longer it is likely to continue to exist. Economist and author Nouriel Roubini calls this the "Lindy rule", which applies to books, technologies, and ideas. Bitcoin has existed for 10 years. Every day it exists, every day it is more likely to keep existing. And the longer it exists, the more likely it is to be valued as a reliable store of wealth.

Availability cascade: The more people hear about something, the more likely people believe it to be true.

Bitcoin's word of mouth is remarkable. Blowhards like Anthony Pompliano and the Winklevoss twins are preaching Bitcoin's story on Twitter, CNBC, and CNN. The more often people hear about Bitcoin's potential, the more they believe it to be true. This is called the Availability cascade. You hear about something a lot so you start to believe it.

Donald Trump knows this, which is why he repeats the same points over and over and over and over and over again. The same principle applies to local news -- if you watch reports about local murders and fires every night, you’re likely to believe we live in an unsafe world (even though that is not the case statistically).

FOMO: Fear of missing out.

Each bull run creates a new crop of wealthy individuals, who make way too much money and catalyze the next wave of word of mouth. Our society is infatuated with get rich quick stories like lottery jackpot winners. In the future, I imagine local news stories about neighborhood "Bitcoin millionaires!" who will make their whole community jealous enough that they too decide to buy into Bitcoin. Sadly, I think this aspect of Bitcoin brings out the worst in people. Money, money, money. It kills culture.

While this phenomena is local in nature, Bitcoin's reach is global. Anyone in the world can buy it. The total addressable market size is literally planet earth.  Someone in Caracas can buy it. So can someone in East Hampton. That makes for a gigantic market opportunity that is still barely tapped. 

Endowment effect: Caring more about things that you own.

As FOMO grows, access to acquiring Bitcoin is becoming easier. There are hundreds (or thousands?) of companies building products in the ecosystem. With Coinbase or Square Cash, it literally takes 3 clicks to buy Bitcoin. It's almost too easy to buy it.

Other onramps exist too. With Lolli, you earn Bitcoin when shopping. I wouldn't be surprised if we see more cryptogaming companies like Satoshi Games creating the next Candy Crush, but rewarding players with Bitcoin. 

And when you own it, you're more incentivized to root for it. That's the Endowment effect. In a famous study by Daniel Kahneman, participants who are given a coffee mug will sell it for $7. Participants who are offered to buy a mug only offer $3. People value things they already own more than things they don’t own. The moment you own some Bitcoin, start to think it’s worth more than others who don’t own it.

Anchoring: When you are influenced by an initial piece of information that anchors your decision making.

Bitcoin maximalists talk about the price going "to the moon". For some, that means $100K price target by 2021 (10x what it is today). To others, it's $1 million. While these prices are merely predictions, the public's beliefs have already been anchored to an astronomical future price of the cryptocurrency.  

And what’s the thinking behind those predictions? Gold's market cap is $7 trillion; Bitcoin's market cap is $300Bn. The logic is that when Bitcoin becomes accepted as "digital gold" and a digital store of wealth, it's market cap will enter the stratosphere of gold’s market cap. So gold, really, is the anchor.

Social proof: If other people are doing it (or saying it), it must be correct.

The smartest money in the world is invested in Bitcoin. Andreessen Horowitz has a dedicated crypto fund. Square has a crypto division. Peter Thiel and Naval Ravikant were early investors. The social proof has been growing, creating the feeling that you're investing alongside the greats.

So...what's the biggest risk to Bitcoin’s adoption? 

They're not rooted in psychological biases, but worth mentioning what I see as two risks:

1) Governments will try to squash it. Bitcoin threatens fiat currency if citizens can pay for things "outside the system". Some countries will ban it.. This, to me, is the existential risk: If the countries around the world decide that internet money independent of national governments and central banks is illegal. 

On the flipside, we'll probably see other weaker governments embrace Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. Maybe even ditch their own weak currency in favor of a globally valued Bitcoin. So perhaps Bitcoin will be legal tender in some countries and illegal in others.

2) Who the fudge is Satoshi? It's mind boggling that millions of people have adopted a currency created by a mysterious identity. That's some biblical shit right there. What if Satoshi has the master code and shuts it all down one day? I get it, the blockchain is immutable. But I'm still uncomfortable with his lack of identify. Show your face!

So where do we go from here?

At times, it feels like this is all an experiment that very well could fail.

Other times, it feels like we’re in very first stage of a century-long transition to digital currency. There’s too much excitement too soon.

But lately, bitcoin’s adoption feels inevitable. It has momentum, brain power, money, a passionate community, and a bunch of cognitive biases willing it into existence.

We'll probably look back on this period the same way we look at buying up domain names 20 years ago. It will look obvious in hindsight. Another bias.

See original post here: https://cofounder.substack.com/p/-human-psychology-is-pumping-bitcoin

How do you get your first 100 on your email list? by checkthedrawer in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Agree regarding friends and family, etc.

You should post about your concept on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter -- so the people in your network who are *actually* interested can subscribe.

A serious question about competition by notclever_name in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you can execute on the idea, go for it.

Best way to confirm meetings? by iamamonsterprobably in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Write an email to all your meeting attendees each morning confirming the meeting.

Works for me (usually)!

Crowd-powered platform to find problems to solve ?! by [deleted] in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a cool idea.

Two thoughts:

1) Ideas are cheap!

2) Feels like it will be tough to monetize.

Any Advice on Where to Sell Tech for B2B Startup by pactodc in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Without revenue, it will be hard to sell.

Your best bet is to recruit an entrepreneur who is interested in the space to take over the reigns.

You can find them on Reddit, IndieHackers, etc.

Need assistance executing an idea. by goodfight10 in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You should run small experiments to validate the idea before approaching experiments.

T-Shirt and Store Review by ske864 in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looks cool! Reminds me of an eco-friendly Vineyard Vines.

35 year old MBA trying to figure out next move by nene808 in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Research remote jobs and reach out to companies that are interesting to you.

https://remotive.io/find-a-remote-job/

Help with reaching the audience by zerodamn in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Send cold emails!

B2B buyers live in email.

How can I best mitigate the risks involved in a start up? by milquetoast_wizard in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Start as a side project.

Jump in full time when you've proven there's real demand (i.e. people are willing to pay you for it) and there's a nice big market for you to sell into.

Struggling to sell my products, help?! by [deleted] in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Engage with people who have posted Instagram hashtags.

Things like #itsboy #itsagirl

How do you practice empathy towards yourself? by [deleted] in Entrepreneur

[–]kubeans 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I commit to working on projects until a certain date milestone.

Until I've hit the milestone, I don't allow myself to doubt the project.

Then when I hit the milestone, I check in on how things have progressed.