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Bread, Bitcoin, and Basement Racks: Building Small, Durable Systems

Bread, Bitcoin, and Basement Racks: Building Small, Durable Systems

The Average Bitcoiner – Sum Divided by Count · Average Bitcoin

January 31, 20269m 56sFull

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Show Notes

In this solo riff, I get back to basics with a simple question: what small, durable skills and systems will still matter through whatever economic “turning” we’re in? I start with baking bread—salt, flour, water, yeast—and how a tiny, profitable craft can outlast volatile cycles and even complement a Bitcoin-standard mindset of spending less than you make. From there I jump to homelab tinkering: wiring a basement while the walls are open, skipping flaky wireless for hard‑wired sensors, planning 240V circuits for a Bitcoin miner as a space heater and a small compute rack, and why muscle memory (in kitchens or shops) scales better than hype.

I also explore running your own AI: local models on a Mac mini or gaming rig, privacy and cost wins, and the growing ecosystem around Claude, Grok, and Llama. We talk practical automations (JSON wrangling, lightweight NLP), agentic helpers like Moltbot, peer‑to‑peer stacks such as Iroh, authenticating with Nostr keys, and even packaging an Android APK. Finally, a nod to ham radio as the original resilient communications layer. It’s a tour of resilient skills—from bread to bits—that you can start today and compound over time.