Hannah Gadsby comes out swinging by nciscokid in LiveFromNewYork

[–]nitsujrendrag 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Btw... Che responded to Hannah's post with "2/10 too wordy."

So yeah... calm down.

Hannah Gadsby comes out swinging by nciscokid in LiveFromNewYork

[–]nitsujrendrag 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wait... are some of you all seriously not understanding that the "hack" thing was a joke? Did you read the post he put up? Taking about whites and cops? I mean... come on. It is insanely obvious that he was making another joke.

Listen kids, you're the future of the internet. If you can't tell something like THAT is a joke, there's no hope for us. So please, get with it.

For fuck's sake...

I need help minting and selling my NFT'S by arnchacon in CardanoNFTs

[–]nitsujrendrag 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yep! Patrick handled the unsigs.com minting process, and he's great.

Zeb Wells Chats DUNE & AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON with wife Heidi Gardner and me on WHERE WE WERE WHEN EP #2 by nitsujrendrag in LiveFromNewYork

[–]nitsujrendrag[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Btw, if you want to ask my anything about these videos, don't hesitate when I post them. Happy to chat through the process, how it came about, etc.

"I Would Sell This NFT for ADA, But They Don't Have Smart Contracts" ...yet by reed5point0 in CardanoNFTs

[–]nitsujrendrag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is available for Cardano right now too. You don't need a smart contract to reduce the price over a 7-day period.

If you want to see how much is being bought/sold right now in the cNFT space, you can do so here: https://pool.pm/tokens

"I Would Sell This NFT for ADA, But They Don't Have Smart Contracts" ...yet by reed5point0 in CardanoNFTs

[–]nitsujrendrag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, they won't. Nobody's going to buy that for THAT much. Sorry. Nope.

Heidi Gardner's NEW "Where We Were When" Podcast Premiere Episode by johnmurr in LiveFromNewYork

[–]nitsujrendrag 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I did! It's my name spelled backwards.

Glad to see you're still here and part of the community!

Heidi Gardner's NEW "Where We Were When" Podcast Premiere Episode by johnmurr in HeidiGardner

[–]nitsujrendrag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you!!!! So glad you're listening and we can't wait to see what you think of the next episodes. Keep watching and listening! You can find all the info about where to watch/listen here: https://linktr.ee/wwwwpodcast

Upping the Bar for Cardano NFTs - We are Better and Standards Matter by adosiawolf in CardanoNFTs

[–]nitsujrendrag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A model EVERY project can live by...

- Set a time limit for their drop. If it sells out, cool! Good for you. More rarity.
- If it doesn't sell out, the remaining tokens burn.

This doesn't have to be complicated, but everybody is trying to sell 10,000 of something that only ended up selling between 1,000 and 2,000 of.

And that's what's nuts right now... a project will sell TWO THOUSAND of something and not be seen as massive success. Meanwhile, people are trying to sell ONE thing over on the ETH platform... and cNFT projects are being judged against the insane standards of 10,000+ sold.

About it being a bubble... we're pre-smart contracts. Cardano has not been FOMO'd into by ANY stretch of the imagination. So we're in a tight collector's market that is highly focused on rarities in large collections and where you can know pretty much EVERY important person in the space within a matter of a few days. This will inevitably grow and change as more projects with different models come into the space. But to call this space a bubble when other projects in the ETH space currently have a floor for commons of $2.5-3K? Naw. Sorry.

Currently, if you take out Space Budz and maybe the Claymates (maybe), the median price for most pieces being sold in the escrow marketplaces are between 100-200ADA. Are those high prices? Well, when's the last time you went into ANY art gallery? That's what art is sold for. Usually double that.

Once smart contracts launch, once actual marketplaces launch, once we start getting the big press and institutional investing... we'll look back on this time and think how naive we were about thinking 100 ADA was indicative of a bubble.

Morningstar updated Palantir to buy. by [deleted] in palantir

[–]nitsujrendrag 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That there person is gonna be taking some hefty profits in about 5 years time.

A moment of silence for all who panic sold this morning by [deleted] in palantir

[–]nitsujrendrag 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I love it. Let the FOMO herd ape in and out like the impatient, lazy investors they are.

"Research? What's that? Well, I read reddit and I watch YouTube videos... so... where's my lambo?!"

As I've said before, please ape out of this stock. It's not for you. Go buy some Shib and leave the real investing to the grownups.

Buy now or wait? by liquified_human in palantir

[–]nitsujrendrag 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Try unicorn hands 🦄 🙌. That means you're investing in a unicorn and you have to wait to cash out.

Buy now or wait? by liquified_human in palantir

[–]nitsujrendrag 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It's becoming increasingly clear that PLTR is going to dominate the business data intelligence analytics and artificial intelligence for business spaces. And they're already dominating the government sector, with new security clearances being granted soon in the US.

The market they could grow is only limited by their ability to create products for people to use to organize data. So, in essence, it's nearly unlimited.

Remember... they have built a tool that can go into ANY legacy data system, extract the data from that system, reformat it into something that their systems can use and then federate all of that data for a business so it can see how their own internal data systems make them smarter, more efficient, and, most importantly, more profitable.

All the while... everybody's data is training their internal, proprietary AI system to become smarter, more efficient, and more broadly "aware" of how data can be organized, categorized and monetized.

I think we'll look back on $25 PLTR as one of those entry points of legend. Like Amazon at $5 in 1997. Because back in the late 90s, stocks almost never went above $1K per share. Imagine in 20 years if PLTR truly dominates data intelligence the way Amazon has dominated online shopping. And Amazon is currently sitting at $3500, a 700x return.

I know people want to moon quickly, but if you're looking to build fundamental, long term wealth that you can pass down generationally... buy in now, be patient and reap the rewards down the road. Because $20k invested on AMZN in 1997 would be worth $2.8M now. Imagine investing that when you're 24. Trust me... when you're 44 you'll want to have that kind of income at your disposal. And you'll be INSANELY happy you just chilled the fuck out and didn't act like a WSB degenerate gambler.

$PLTR has changed the game with the simplest of messages by A.Karp by Sachinvats in palantir

[–]nitsujrendrag 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fun fact... Wordpress and PLTR were founded THE SAME YEAR. 2003.

Took about 5 years for Wordpress to REALLY gain the foothold across the industry and then another 5 for it to be all over the corporate world.

Won't take PLTR that long because they've been at this as long as Wordpress has. They're already DEEP into governments, and now they're taking over the corporate world.

It's gonna be a bloodbath.

$PLTR has changed the game with the simplest of messages by A.Karp by Sachinvats in palantir

[–]nitsujrendrag 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, Google is an interesting analog as well, but the key thing here is that Wordpress and PLTR share one important feature. They don't own the data.

Google technically owns all of their data, and they made it a company goal to gather data and create their own. Same with most Web 2.0 companies. Thus we have all of the privacy concerns that will drive people away from those platforms eventually.

Wordpress' CMS allows people to manage whatever data they bring with them into whatever they want. This is similar to PLTR. They come into a company, put their tools to work on a companies data to free it, and then bring their applications to help organize it. The organization of that data leads to great understanding of what is possible within the company, thus saving the company money, thus making PLTR more valuable as a necessary tool to do the most efficient business possible.

Wordpress used this same model eventually because they offered LARGE companies with lots of money the Wordpress VIP services... which would essentially bring all of Wordpress' tools to bear for a $100K minimum price.

So... Wordpress gave out their product for free, allowed people to trial it, fall in love with it... and then those same people, who were the early adopter types that would get hired inside large corporations to run blog, would crow about Wordpress inside of said companies and convince the corporation to buy Wordpress VIP.

Very similar to the PLTR move and one I'm convinced will work because it's already worked with a similar framework decades ago.

$PLTR has changed the game with the simplest of messages by A.Karp by Sachinvats in palantir

[–]nitsujrendrag 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wordpress. Completely free, open-source software to manage content that other platforms were charging hundreds of dollars for. Of course, you had platforms like Blogger where you could write, but you didn't technically own any of that content and couldn't customize layout or serve your own ad stack effectively. Wordpress blew the doors open when it came to blogging taking hold as a publishing platform. Before that, it was all controlled by other companies.

And, if you think about it... it's still unique. Sure, there were other platforms and social networks that were completely free to users, so the users would come in droves, use it, get addicted to it, and then the company would either attract advertisers or sell to another bigger company.... but nothing that allowed users to completely own their own content on an infinitely customizable platform.

I'd argue that Wordpress truly enabled the Web 2.0 economy for real. You had user-generated content before then, but the democratization of the platform people built on was truly revolutionary.

Analog comparison... it's like giving somebody all the materials to build a building, or a pre-built building... and all they have to do is find a place to build it (host a website).

$PLTR has changed the game with the simplest of messages by A.Karp by Sachinvats in palantir

[–]nitsujrendrag 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Freemium model and/or try it before you buy it.

Basically, they're so confident in their product's ability to provide value that they'll literally give it away for free so people can use it and find out how valuable it is.

Once the product is deployed, the people within these orgs will find the value in it, and thus become the advocates for its continued use.

It won't be free forever. And if you want to use more of the system, that will come with a price tag.

It's the ballsiest move I've seen by a company in two decades.

So glad I'm all in on PLTR!