Don't follow me, I'm lost

in anarchism •  8 years ago  (edited)

Hello, Steemit community :)

My name is Ashley, I'm 26, and I'm a recreational mathematician, blockchain enthusiast, and budding freelance computer programmer and web developer. I'm engaged to Matt, aka the witness @complexring and I decided to put a face and introduction behind my posts.

I have no desire to be anonymous on here (if I did, you all wouldn't know about it!) and I really want to build a coherent online presence across a wide variety of social media and blogging sites. I have the account @ashley-toth in addition to @edgeland, because I wanted to test the Facebook signup feature and grab my real name.

2016-07-2013.39.36ba157.md.jpg

My life on Steemit so far

I read the whitepaper shortly after it was published (at Matt's prompting) and @ned was kind enough to talk with me on Skype! I knew this had potential, and was especially impressed with the way things are structured and the fact that it was Dan and Ned doing this, but I have to admit that I was skeptical about what would happen to the price...

  • I thought the market might just tank significantly after July 4th because so many users would be cashing out their STEEM and SBD. Obviously, I misjudged people's long-term investment and interest in trading the token, and there were forces at play that I didn't understand. There's actually volume and buy support!?
  • I was worried when the rewards structure was changed, because there was so much argument about it and the developers were changing the curation rewards so dramatically. At the time I thought the incentive to curate would be decreased and that users would be upset if a change were implemented retroactively. I actually like the way things turned out though.
  • My family and friends thought I was scamming them. (Ok, this wasn't really a serious concern, but you know, negativity from others never cheers me up.)

Needless to say...never mind. We have already realized some AMAZING benefits of being early adopters of Steem, and I'm so happy that my fiancé had the foresight to start participating and mining from nearly the beginning. We're going to use what we've made to pay off some debts, help pay for our wedding, and invest in meaningful and innovative projects.

I plan to keep all of my VESTS indefinitely and build my blog while transferring some of my SBD to bitcoin and other tokens for holding and diversified investment. (Here, as always, it's important to diversify.)

I do still wonder about the very long-term value of STEEM and SBD. The points raised by @kyletorpey about altcoins deserve consideration. Are there plans to encourage people to buy SBD besides making an app for using SBD for direct purchase of merchandise?

More about me

I met Matt while pursuing my M.S. in mathematics at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, CO. The climate was absolutely beautiful there, and I see why it's ranked as one of the best places to live in the U.S. It really does look like this.

13614918_1154955794550718_8343812736293176183_n9c54d.md.jpg
Crepuscular rays at Horsetooth
Photo submitted by: Preetam Yengkokpam

I wrote a thesis on the periodic points of Hénon maps (which are cross sections of the famous Lorenz attractor in chaos theory) and graduated in 2015.

When I finish my professional website, I'll provide a link to this work and my CV on Steemit and everywhere else.

lorenz275fab.md.gif

We were in a long-distance relationship for a year and a half while Matt did fancy post-docs in Korea, China, Berkeley, and Canada and I was still in school. This was not fun, but there were some perks, like getting to visit China and have a free place to stay. Here I am at the top of the Oriental Pearl Tower in Shanghai.

12741880_792510934226125_1227887282605146497_n739d6.jpg

We are getting married on Labor Day weekend, which will be our 3rd anniversary of being together! (I wish I had seen the Bitcoin Wedding Registry post by @exitmass earlier: https://steemit.com/life/@exitmass/the-bitcoin-wedding-registry#@edgeland/re-kareemaudi-re-exitmass-the-bitcoin-wedding-registry-20160719t165144209z.) This was our engagement picture:

Work and blogging about work

I'm teaching myself PHP and Ruby on Rails for web development, and want to become well-versed in blockchains and be able to write up my own shitcoin! I'm a fan of Mr. Money Mustache's claim that understanding computers well is so rare that it can be considered an economic loophole in society. Having seen Matt and many people on Steemit succeed at working remotely, I plan to use my background in math to do the same, and to document my journey online. My primary goals are to network with people, build a resumé of completed projects, and write up original ideas on the @edgeland blog as often as possible. I would do this even if Steemit didn't exist, but definitely feel like it's the best community in which to operate.

You'll probably also see posts about attempts at convincing people to join Steemit (I'm going to step it up and try some of the methods of @cryptoctopus and @clains), math and science, and meta blogging.

Other things I care about

“All authority of any kind, especially in the field of thought and understanding, is the most destructive, evil thing. Leaders destroy the followers and followers destroy the leaders. You have to be your own teacher and your own disciple. You have to question everything that man has accepted as valuable, as necessary.”
— J. Krishnamurti, Freedom from the Known

I agree with this statement on all levels, and I really care about basic human rights and freedom. If I could change anything, I would like to see more people have greater control over their lives and less fear and anxiety.

I consider my involvement in the crypto-world and use of Steemit to be aligned with this vision, and I think the community here is wonderfully free-thinking and objective. It's so exciting to see.

Right now I'm working to generate publicity and funding for the David Bohm Society, which exists to connect people around the proposals of David Bohm and J. Krishnamurti and the practice of Bohm dialogue.

Jiddu-Krishnamurti-In-obedience-there-is-always-fear-and-fear-darkens-the-mind572c4.md.png

In my spare time, I play classical piano, read, hike, and enjoy home-brew and good red wine. :D

Twitter: Ashley Toth/apathlessland, and I'm tweeting this Steemit post
Facebook: Ashley Toth

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Wow! The Wow is for several things. First that J. Krishnamurti quote was one I hadn't encountered before. That truly resonates with me. That is so close to my own personal beliefs and something I say in a way that is nowhere near as short and elegant as that.

I love Stochastics and Chaos Theory. I haven't done much with it in a couple of decades other than some occasional fractals and such for various projects, but it is something I first became interest in around 1988.

I don't consider myself on par with any mathematician (yourself included). I was so much of a computer geek that I could learn math VERY fast but that also made me get bored really fast in mathematics classes. I did do a Stochastics special topic course around 92 or 93, and I went up thru Calc II, but haven't really used it much in the fields I worked in since then. I loved math. I did not like math classes. :) That is still true. I don't have much patience for doing the same form of problem over and over again as homework. I kind of see the reasoning behind such tasks, I just failed in the patience for them. I wanted to apply the knowledge NOW.

Third wow. I've lived most of my life in Colorado (predominantly on the Western Slope) and now live in the Westminster area north of Denver so I definitely can relate to that photo you shared.

I wish you and your fiance the best. You are a very interesting person, I suspect I'll be enjoying other posts from you in the future.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Thanks @dwinblood! I'm following your blog.

Fractals and chaos theory are so fun. I never took a course in stochastic but am sure I could figure it out. Math classes become more helpful at the graduate level, when you actually start to need a teacher just to see what the hell is going on sometimes. ;)

Wow, you're in CO. I miss it.

I did like Math. I just usually understood the lesson (in calc classes) in the first 10 minutes and the rest of the 40 minutes or so I was bored because he wouldn't give the assignment until the end of class. That was usually like doing 100 of the problems of the same type overnight and bringing them to class.

I was young, rebellious, and very much a programming nut. WWW hadn't hit yet. I was very active on the internet in college but it was all FTP, Archie, Telnet, and Gopher for the most part... and it was almost always a unix machine or a VAX VMS machine you were talking to... all command line and ASCII. :)

In my Stochastics class me and one friend did all of our work on Commodore Amiga 2000s... I actually did the entire class load of work for that in a week (like I said I liked it). Then the rest of the people all using x386s basically did what I had done. I had some mandelbrot set movies, and julia set movies, and some weird pseudo 3D attempts that didn't look awesome (3d modeling was still in its infancy).

So I'm old.... but I love this stuff. I saw bitcoin when it was $0.005/coin and thought "Gee that is a cool idea, but the government will probably squash it, plus $20 will buy my family a meal"

Of course I am kicking myself as I did recognize the potential. I just didn't take the risk.

No risk, no reward.

As to my blog... I'm kind of all over the place at the moment. I will likely make a regular gamedev blog as one of my pieces, as to the rest, I'm still trying to find what I might be good at talking about that people want to hear.

Thanks.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

I guess those were the days, man! I didn't really experience anything before WWW and I had a Lenovo laptop and an eMac in college. I'm glad I grew up with sleeker technology, but also sometimes wish I had the direct knowledge of the history of computers and the internet that people older than I have.

You must have had a lot spare time to do what you wanted if you finished class assignments that quickly. I felt the same way about all the repetitive calc problems, but I started attending the professors' research sessions and going to math conferences and that was a bit more interesting.

I've met so many people who say that about bitcoin. sighs
At least we didn't miss the boat with Steem.

You could write about programming and hardware then vs. now, and how the internet developed vs. how you expected it to. I also like programming exercises and challenges. There used to be a section in "Scientific American" with programming assignments before the magazine got watered down. Have you seen Project Euler?
Don't know much about gamedev but I'd probably look at that too.

Will check out Project Euler... doesn't sound familiar.

Cool thing about a good game engine. You don't have to use it just for games. It just saves you having to do all the very complex building of a powerful and efficient 3D engine, and input handler. So you can focus on the fun stuff. Unless you want to build an engine. :) You can use the tech for anything though :)

EDIT: Project Euler sounds cool. I book marked it up. I'll keep in mind maybe posting something about old school computer stuff. I wouldn't have thought of that.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

If you'll write about gamedev, I'll follow. ;) Also, we started long time ago, when demoscene was amazing thing, maybe you can write about it.

edgeland
Excellent work 👍👍👍👍👍🍸🍸🍸🍸🍸
Thanks everyone

You're in Westminster? My wife and I just left Louisville for California about 6 months ago - we definitely traded down.

Yeah I live in Westminster. I also work from home as a Senior Network Engineer, and part time Game Developer, and now steemit poster. :)

That is Awesome you went to CSU! I'm in Fort Collins, born and raised. Wish we knew this before you guys moved away, we certainly could have met up at some point to hand out! @complexring and I are "buddies" on some trade-related chat channels, so I had to ping him and ask him about it. We're already in talks about plans for the next time you guys are back in town :)

Congrats on the engagement and the steemit success! Great to see more and more people getting involved here, and so many from all walks of life!

Wow. It's crazy that you're friends online and unknowingly lived in the same place. Yes, we should definitely get together next time we visit the area!

Thanks. :D

Wow, your future husband has one magnificent beard! :-)

Lol! Thank you.

Awesome. The quote definitely by Jiddu Krishnamurthi is so true for all the "followers" in this world. Breaking free of obedience also removes sceptism and allows the mind to grow in endless possibilities. Happy Steeming.

.

I know. I'm a very lucky guy!

!cheetah whitelist

Okay, I have whitelisted @edgeland. I won't bug them.

Welcome aboard and thank you for this lovely written intro :)

When I finish my professional website, I'll provide a link to this work and my CV on Steemit and everywhere else.

Let me know if i can be any assistance on the design part
Happy to help!

Thank you :)

brains and looks . your bf is a lucky guy
all the best

Thanks! :D

Greetings! Looking forward to meeting you and @complexring in Acapulco!

Interesting... I can see us doing this.

My grandparents lived in Guatemala for a while. They weren't anarchists, but they described their willingness to leave the (relative and temporary) safety and luxury of the U.S. for more adventure.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

I love how this lady talks about taxes! (around 11:00)

Thanks brindleswan; the video you posted has relieved a lot of my concerns in moving to Acapulco

"A recreational mathematician" - the best kind. I'm something like that as well. I just got my MS in electrical engineering from CU Boulder - and now I'm finishing up my PhD at UCSB. Anyway, always fun to find a fellow Colorado-lover. If you're ever in the mood for some recreational economics, you might find my game theory series fun. I go super easy on the math though, so maybe that will be disappointing. :)

Thanks! I doubt it'll disappoint completely. I'll let you know. ;)

Wow, this is so uplifting to read.
I am currently doing my Electrical Engineering course, and I love to do recreational maths on the side for fun.
I hope to one day make it to my PhD, though I have been struggling with some courses I hope to get better.

Go for it! Electrical Engineering is such a great blend of physics, math, and "real" engineering. I hope you stick it out!

My friends and family tried to tell me it was a get rick quick scheme. They dont understand that this isnt easy and its so much more than just the money. I feel the money is the reward, and losses come from greed. This is a whole new world that ive walked into and i cant find the words to explain to friends and family that this isnt a scam, and im actually really, really excited to begin this new challenge and learn along the way.
Without support its difficult but I know i have support from my Steemit community.

It's great that you think this way! I like meeting people who care about the community and innovation. :D

Well, writing isn't that easy, and scamming the site enough to literally "get rich" would also take time and effort, could be risky, and would f*** up the value in the long term. I'd much rather learn how to write well and develop my abilities than copy and paste someone else's pictures and try to get away with pretending to be them....

That's exactly true. I don't even know how you could do this without having a sense of guilt because gosh darn that's just horrible. Someone recently tried to steal my identity and it worries me everyday but I don't understand how they could have felt right doing it.

Welcome, I upvoted (not only) for the Krishnamurti quote.

Haha. I love Krishnamurti. Thank you!

and Krishnamurti loves you) And others Steemiters. Have a good journey here!

Thanks! I wish you well on your journey too.

Feels good to be in good companion here.

+1 to that :)

Steemit welcomes you here, all the best for your journey!!! =D

Glad to see you posting here rather than FB, reddit =D

Absolutely. Why not monetize your content, all day long...?

Yes, why someone would continue to post on FB unrewarded is beyond me.

Honestly, I have no idea about the math stuff but I can really get down with the other things you care about section and have very similar views!

Haha, fair enough! Thanks. :D

I'm a recreational mathematician
I plan to keep all of my VESTS indefinitely

Obviously you've done the math then.. :) Powering down your account is not something you're going to do willy nilly then... you see the real value.

I also won't be powering down my account from my vests anytime soon. :)

Nice meeting you.

yeah welcome steemit, I hope you become part of the community here at least add a little joke to $5000 in 1 hour :)

nice post
cheers

nice post $15000

lol :)
Upvote now all
$10000+ today :)

Now I feel the pressure to post something good. :p

@edgeland yeah it's great, good job

@blackjincrypto It's Very Simple bro, post looks interesting

true

interesting and funny

Hi Ashley! Great to have you here! I love your writing style and think you'll be a huge contribution to the community here! :0)

Thanks!

Welcome to Steemit! Very interesting story. Glad so many others are involved with blockchain technology and more increasing on a daily basis!

"and I really want to build a coherent online presence across a wide variety of social media and blogging sites"
This is what I want now too, more people need to know about it and share this amazing innovative experience with everyone!

Thanks!

Yes, I can't believe how few people still know about it.

Recreational mathematics, sounds like a codeword for weed.
'sometimes I think about how many grams are in an ounce and how many ounces are in a pound and then realize 452 grams are in a pound and they're all intertwined.'

Hahaha....

Don't worry I'm a troll

Good to know.

Trying to understand how "recreation" and "maths" can go together, but I'm having a hard time... I'm not against maths - I just don't get it...

Haven't you met people who do puzzles or brainteasers for fun? It's like that but much more frustrating.

Aha... nice... Ok I think I get it. I like some frustrating activities too - like trying to optimize some types of code for 1-2-5% performance gains and spending like 15 hours straight on it - that "normal" people won't do... I guess it's for the satisfaction of knowing you made a difference. As for puzzles, yes, I've actually done some 5000-7000 pieces puzzles which are hanging on my walls... but that was pre-Internet era, lol.

The code optimization sounds intense!

It is - only due to my self-inflicting exhaustion ahahaha... otherwise it's pretty mundane, moving code around, rewriting very simple pieces in a different order that affect the processor cache, trying various compilation flags (that can take hours because there are so many combinations that can make a difference) etc. Thing is I'm not a good coder (I don't consider myself one actually) so my "repertoire" of what I can do in terms of optimization, like rewriting entire chunks differently, is pretty limited. Still the avenues you can explore to make stuff faster are a lot.

One of the "mind blowing" things about optimization, is that of hardware efficiency. Imagine a data center, if you will, like FB or Google, where they pay millions of dollars in hardware and energy. Say a data center can have 10mn operating expenses. Now if you can make things faster by just 10% - suddenly you consume much less power - say -5%. And then you save hundreds of thousands of dollars. When you extrapolate this same process into multiple data centers of the same company, you get millions in savings just because a small tweak made a program faster. It's similar with mining hardware too - as you pay less for electricity for more hashpower. Yet I don't run any costly data center or mining data center - but the idea that this can do that and that I can achieve it, is kind of appealing to me.

On a deeper level I can't really relax if something is not working at optimal efficiency at all times. My mind keeps going back to a pattern like "ok I need to make this better ASAP". And it won't settle until I do it, lol...

Welcome! Glad to have another thought provoking steemian amongst us! :)

hey :) you have a same opinion with me ,about "really care about basic human rights and freedom" exactly :) happy steemit Ashley Toth / @edgeland

:)

Hello ashley :) nice skill ...i like that....you want share your skill to us? ...i hope you agree with that

Butterfly Effect!

What is recreational mathematics? Is it like chess problems, card counting, and IQ style tests?

By "recreational," I just mean that I know some math and like to do it, but am not an academic or full-time teacher.
But yes, examples are games like Go and Chess, puzzles like the ones in the WSJ's Varsity Math, Sudoku, and writing programs to generate these:
julia05be92e.th.jpg

In that case we have something in common.

I've been thinking of taking Mandelbrot and Julia set generation programs like that and throwing them into Unity. Could easily generate a heightmap and from that fully 3D exploreable images like that. However, it'd be difficult to do that including zooming. Though it could be done.

EDIT: If you get bored... check it out. Unity is free to use. It's pretty awesome too. You can use C#, a hybrid java, or a variant on python (called Boo). I recommend C# for Unity.

Let me know if you need any help if you are interested. :)

I am by no means a mathematician or exceptional at much other than counting in binary but codeacademy has helped a bunch. I have been able to play around with Javascript, Ruby, Python designing apps and build your own adventure platforms with my friends. Its free and educational! :)

Don't discount those accomplishments. For some fields I believe if a person has the desire and self-motivation the information is out there and they can easily learn the same things they would learn at a university. The problem is to do it truly well you need a lot of passion and self motivation since you don't have someone you are paying you telling you that you must turn something in. On the flip side those people that did it on their own are often FAR MORE skilled at it as they had to be truly passionate about the topic to make it that far. Some of the best programmers and IT people I've worked with were that way DESPITE the college or lack of college education. There are some fields that do require a university as we can't really do some things without access to really expensive and specialized equipment, and resources. I believe you can be a brilliant programmer, mathematician or both without going to a University if you have the drive and will to do so. I don't consider myself particularly skilled at math. I am great at the math I have a purpose for, and other parts of math I didn't put to use so they have atrophied to almost non-existence. It is also the fact that I may not have ever learned some maths that would truly have helped me. So I am ignorant. I am a decent and eccentric programmer though, so I managed to code fractals despite some of the crazy math involved. I could look at the code and understand what it was doing better than I could look at the math. I'd like to rectify that but I kind of doubt I will at this stage. Though ya never know... stranger things have happened.

Does @hmfoucault have anything to do with Foucault's Pendulum?

EDIT: you may have to reply to your own post, or to mine... though the only way I'll know you replied to your own is if you put @dwinblood somewhere in it to let me know. I like to talk so I run into this nesting limit at least once a day. :)

Cool, thanks! I've never used Unity, but I've seen 3D images before and liked them, so I'll check it out and let you know what happens.

I've made some Mandelbrot and Julia sets with Java and with BASIC in the past. Made one where you can move the cursor around and see the Julia set corresponding to each point on the Mandelbrot set. :D

I was going to ask you what language you used to do those. Last time I made a mandelbrot program (a few years ago) I wrote them in C. I made some videos... they were not as smooth and fancy as people that put a lot of time into it. :)

I thought about making my own number system using strings so I could do higher precision floating point. It'd be SLOW but the problem with the sets I'm sure you know is you can only zoom in so far before your float or double can no longer keep track of it. I think it'd be neat to keep zooming. That'd be really slow though :)

I guess it's been longer than I thought. I made the last program one day and two videos the next day. I've been meaning to play with 3D versions of that. Wonder if that'd make for an interesting blog.

Really amazing and inspiring post! I am so excited to be part of this community already! I can feel this is going to be amazing! :) Alla x

Thanks! Me too. :)

like the way you think..

Thanks!

You seem to be doing pretty good for someone who is lost. Well done!

Haha, thanks.

@edgeland Welcome.

I understand that the point of SBD is just to allow conversion between Steem/Steem Power and to the user's preferred cryptocurrency (more often than not eventually to fiat).

That is, to provide liquidity. I believe in the whitepaper it was mentioned that the majority of Steem Dollars received are sold (not verbatim of course).

Feel free to reply to me, I'll be online most of the day.

Look forward to

People will still buy Steem (in the form of Steem power) to increase their expectancy from posting on the platform (or similar ones).

So you'll still have enough people effectively going long.

Speculators will also buy Steem because it's value will appreciate.

Oh, you're saying people will buy SBD just to do conversions and to go long in Steem? I forgot about that part of the paper.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

"My family and friends thought I was scamming them. (Ok, this wasn't really a serious concern, but you know, negativity from others never cheers me up.)"

I get this a lot too it can be quite annoying at times xD

thanks for the interesting post :)

Oh! You're engaged to @complexring. The guy who sends STEEM to accounts with rock band names that haven't posted anything yet? That would explain a lot!

Yes, @complexring has computer and financial skills and understands the structure of Steemit well. That clearly makes us better positioned to contribute to this community and to be crypto-investors and advocates of worldwide financial freedom. ;)

You can not get lost if you have no destination

"understanding computers well is so rare that it can be considered an economic loophole in society." Enjoyed this the most because it resonated with my thought processes I was having this morning about technology. Overall a great read and well worth my time. You're a polymath in my book! Thanks for sharing. :)

Wow, thank you!

You're very welcome. Looking forward to your future material. :)

Interesting... We can think about our life in a huge scale. Great post😊

Nice Ashley! My husband and I just started out on Steemit:
https://steemit.com/introduceyourself/@dka/from-south-africa-to-laos-introduceyourself

Voted for it! I love all the water pictures.

Thanks for the great post. Good luck with your(s) future ;-)

Thanks!

@Ashley welcome, nice to meet you and join in community steemit

Happy Steemit!!!

Ha! I like it.

very interesting story ^^,Nice to know you

Wow, I'm totally thinking about starting a website too after I found Steemit. One about establishing artists. I'm trying to get my cousin who does fine arts onboard as well as her friends. I think it really help them establish themselves early since they're all first year students.

And you're a classical pianist too... definitely will follow. Which composers do enjoy most?

For the record... everyone is a little lost sometimes right? It's all a journey and I've decided to enjoy it, no matter how unsettled I may feel at times.

Look forward to your future posts :)

That's great! I'm trying to get some of the fine artists in my life to join, too.

I really like to play Bach and Beethoven, and music that feels "impressionistic," like Chopin, Debussy, and John Field. I think John Field doesn't get enough credit. Also, Dvorak's duets are a blast, but I don't have anyone to play with now. :)

Definitely love Debussy, especially 'Estampes', I was mesmerized when I first heard that suite. And Beethoven is a close second for me... so much passion! I never realised how amazing Bach was til I played it... for me the most challenging to play. John Field is definitely overlooked... creator of the nocturne.

I'm really loving some of Shostakovich's prelude and fugues atm... quite dark musically though.

You have great taste. I'm relaxing with the 'Estampes' now, and I want to learn it. Playing Bach well is so hard, but it's stunningly beautiful when you do. I like the way Glenn Gould emphasized the hypnotic quality of Bach's music instead of focusing on speed.

I agree that Shostakovich is dark, but enjoyable. I have to be in the right mood for it.

Was at the Pearl Tower few years back.
Image of Pearl Tower
Love the looks of the people who were scared to stand on the glass floor.

Lol! Yes, they're a hoot!

no thanks... vertigo...

:/

Not all who wander are lost

Look at you, so young and carefree :)

You guys rock. Welcome to Steemit.

Thanks. :)

thanks for the great quotes. You have a very interesting life! Enjoy!

Hi Ashley!!! First of all congratulations on your upcoming wedding. Second of all I agree with you I try and have as many social media accounts as I can, and make a presence in online media. Third of all I love that you play piano, I kind of do I've have like 3 years of lessons but I've always loved people that can play the piano.

Hi! That's great. I know it's hard to learn but 3 years is significant. What do you like to play?

Excellent work 👍👍👍👍👍🍸🍸🍸🍸🍸
Thanks

You should check out the Nexus Project as well. You will be pleasantly surprised with what is going on.

Ok, I will. Thanks! Looks like it's NSF funded?

Finally Matt allows me (us) to meet his beautiful wife. Thanks for this awesome post, Ashley. ;)

Thank you, aizensou. ;)

Tell Matt that I'm so so jealous him ...

Nice post. Welcome to Steem community.

I agree. We'll be lost together...

We all finding our way #lost

You've found your place, so you are not lost :D

Welcome

great to have you here Ashley!

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Congratulations on becoming a Steemit power couple!

Haha, thank you. :D

This is going to be interesting. I'm really excited about our combined efforts and the crypto funds we've made so far.

This in really exciting

Thank you, Ashley for sharing with us your beautiful story.

Well I just wanted to see what hair texture you had and learned a lot more. The organization you are working for surly will benifit from your successful fundraising.

Lol, hi there! I have pretty fine hair. Can't do braids without extensions, but I could do dreads.

Why aren't you able to do braids without extension? I think if you have fine hair the parts that are created to make dreads need be larger. In the end it starts to pull and puts stress on you scalp. If you do try and make your own dreads. Consider growing your hair all the way down your back so that once you part it and it dreads up is wont have a thin appearance due to the length adding thickness.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Similar to SP, SMD tokens cannot be purchased directly on an external exchange. SMD are primarily earned through contributing but can be purchased by converting STEEM tokens to SMD tokens.

Actually Steem Dollars can now purchased on external exchanges !
https://poloniex.com/exchange#btc_sbd
https://bittrex.com/Market/Index?MarketName=BTC-SBD

PS Abbreviation of SBD = Steem Backed Dollars
or just SD = Steem Dollars (not SMD please edit)

sleepless steemit nights reading and more reading :)

Something you might be interested, registering your marriage on the Expanse blockchain with borderless.tech

Thanks! I'll looks at that.

Great person, I hope you can sharing about your experience in Steemit with your husband!

Awesome post. The fears about Steemit you overcame are not the same as mine but similar. Reading your content has helped me decide to go for it on Steemit. Thank you for honesty and transparency.

Thanks! I'm glad you decided to go for it. I think honesty and transparency are important. :)

Love that quote! True words always put meaning to one's own life.

you lost? but steemit find you @edgeland :)

Steemit was superb, and it's one that makes me wonder.

Yeah of course, steemit is big :)

im following

Yeesh, there really are people as crazy as I am!

Ok, recreational mathematician and computer programmer. So you collect back-issues of Scientific American? :) I do actually have some projects which will need a freelance computer programmer, if you're currently free for such work.

Red wine is linked to longevity and good health, so here's a toast to a long life and good health.

Chaos Theory is fascinating and still poorly understood.

Lol. I wouldn't say I collect the issues, but my dad has some and I read them. :)

I'd love to hear about your projects and would be available starting this weekend or early next week. I'm sure we can quickly determine how much I can help you, if I can. Are you on Steem Slack? I'll have an email set up with my website soon.

To resveratrol! Toasts back

Ok, here is a quick list of projects (excluding hacking the computer on my telescope, as that will be difficult without being here):

Secure Router Project: Forward-port some Linux kernel patches, write a web front-end to the Quagga router, OpenFlow software and Linux Netfilter that is idiot-proof, and another that a decent user could use. I want to build something that is very, very secure and easy for Joe Average to keep secure.

Secure Router Project II: One of my objectives is to develop an open source kit equivalent to Barracuda's quarter million dollar system for securing websites. Well, as equivalent as you need to be if you're not running 250 independent servers. To do that, I need a simple, lightweight web cache, that a web server can push updates to, for static content. Squid is too heavy and has stability issues at times. It doesn't need filtering (the firewall does that) or rewrite rules (netfilter does that) but it does need to send a copy of all inbound traffic to a different process for intrusion detection.

Ground Penetrating Radar: These things are nearly useless unless used by an expert because the results are cluttered and confused. Part of the problem is that the software used assumes the ground is uniformly dry and that nothing ever refracts the signal.

Max Tegmark developed a radio telescope that could look in all directions at the same time, using FFTs and lots of receivers. My thought is that it should be possible to borrow that method to boost sensitivity and directionality. Using pulses and continuous wave, it should be possible to create a system of equations for the exact position of an object. Solve the system and you have a virtual reality map of everything underground.

Neural Networks: A neuron, in a computer simulation, has N inputs and M outputs. Each output is raised if one of a set of inputs is present. In other words, a logic gate with a truth table per output. A gate can't learn so easily, but if you have a neural net that is already trained, you just want it for recognition, then why not convert the neural net into the corresponding boolean function, optimise and then convert to a hardware language like Verilog or System C? Much faster than running it as a neural net.

Linux Autoconfig: Have a program that uses the hardware detection libraries and bus scanners to produce an initial configuration for the Linux kernel. It would greatly simplify setting it up.

Linux SELinux Autoconfig: Given a suitable test script for a program, and all the symbols and dynamically linked libraries, the idea would be to heuristically figure out the strictest permissions that the program could tolerate. Most distros provide archaic or broken configurations, because it's too difficult to set up manually. But most programs have test kits and there are test kits for Linux as a whole. It shouldn't be hard to extend this and use it to make sure everything is secure and still working.

Mandelbrot Particle Tracer: A given starting point in the Mandelbrot set will follow a trajectory. Normally, this is coloured in according to how long it takes the point to escape. Let's say, instead, you plot the trajectory itself. There are places where the point orbits a Strange Attractor. It doesn't matter which starting point you pick from the orbit, it will still orbit the same point. What you should end up with is a set of black holes, with stable orbits, n-ary orbits and areas of escape, probably all with fractal boundaries.

What if you had a program that approximated (to some arbitrary resolution) the different regions and plotted those instead? A contour map of known Strange Attractors and their gravity wells. Better yet, also provide a visual representation that allows Strange Attractors to be classified by a user.

Sorry, I am just getting to seriously look at these now. Do you have a timeframe in mind for them?

I have so much to learn on here, I've just started so a bit lost and drowning i all the information. Congratulations on your engagement, all the best to you both

Thanks!

Wow, unbelievable response!

Hey gal, very nice introduction!
Love David Bohm's ideas, much appreciation for working with DBS!
Did your have a chance to read Wholeness and the Implicate Order? Mind-blowing book ;)

Thank you. :D

Yes, so do I! I was looking for a way to connect with others who are interested in Bohm and Krishnamurti and all that when I found the society's website. Here's its Facebook and Twitter in case you're interested. I want to do a series of posts about Bohm's dialogue proposals, the nature of the self, and quantum mechanics and donate the proceeds to the society, which is trying to produce a film to reach a larger audience.

I have not read that one yet, but will as soon as I finish up my current book. Thanks for the suggestion.

Then I will follow this great endeavor ;)

Lovely post! Who needs governments to provide #basicincome, when #crypto can! Go #steem!

Who needs government.

Thank you. Right?

Hey @edgeland, I love your post and don't understand a lot of what you understand, but you have shared it so elegantly! Thank you. Happy ot be part of this.

Thank you! :)

welcome @edgeland

Almost 16.000 usd really? i only can say well done

Thanks for sharing, and congratulations on your wedding.

I saw anarchism here, so please, I think this information is useful, please take a look, if you've already seen it, please try to inform other, thanks.

https://steemit.com/steem/@joiflores/how-the-system-works-part1-inside-job

Thanks.

Nice, im happy for you

welcome to steemit it nice to have here in the community

how to monetize It ?!

Thanks for sharing your fears and insight about Steem. Personally I am very positive about it and really hope this experiment works.

Me too. You're welcome. :)

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

I hope it continues to grow. My mom is going to join!

Great. I am sure she will enjoy it!

I finally convinced her to blog about education and being a teacher.

Awesome! :)

Obedience can be a beautiful thing especially when it leads to discipline. There is good fear and there is bad fear.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

I think that applies in the case of young children and their parents, but not otherwise.

What is good fear for adults? Fear can have limited good or neutral effects, like stopping people from killing or stealing because they're afraid it'll be witnessed and they'll get caught, but I wouldn't call it good, fundamentally.

Hi edgeland. I am Chinese. Good to hear that you have been to China. Do you understand some basic Chinese words?
你好,你的文章很出色。

Hi! I don't understand Chinese writing. I can only say hello and a couple other things. :(

Hello ashley, are you still lost today?? We're on steemit will found you :)

welcome to Ashley , happy steemit

hi @edgeland i was led here by @ben.zimmerman's post! I am always curious about how the mysterious dev look like for e.g. @complexring and seeing him here! You guys look very lovely in the engagement picture. Just want to say a late congratulations to both of you! :-)

@coinbitgold, thank you! It was so nice of @ben.zimmerman to mention us. We're having a blast on steemit. I hope things are going well for you since you left the phd program. :D

A mixture of relieved and heavyhearted feelings, i guess. But more time for family and also steemit lol now so i am happy. Thanks! :-)

I guess with 200+ replies you won't really get this, but I just made a post about Krishnamurit's relation to bruce lee, and I have written a ton about bohm's works and its relation to bitcoin etc.

Actually I saw this last night and upvoted your post! I didn't know much about Bruce Lee until reading about him on Steemit. I was writing a post about Bohm and Krishnamurti last night (my first one), and just finished it and linked to you.

I'd love to know what you think about Bohm's work and its relation to bitcoin. What is the relation?

Seems I can't think you enough. I will get back to you on this, because you will be VERY interested in the content I bring forward towards you, and I might likely put something together specifically for this platform. I have no idea how this platform works, but I am now quite incentivized to participate properly which is VERY interesting to me. I have a friend that is going over everything with me as I type.

Head is buzzing, give me time. I can't find anyone that understands bohm as well as I do, in regard to Krishanmurit's insights, I have looked hard (would be happy to be proven wrong so I had someone to relate to!) and so I believe you will be quite interested.

Cheers, what an interesting movement steemit is.

Sounds good! I will definitely follow your work.

CSU!!!

Did you go there?

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Thanks for that glimpse into your life, Ash. Here's a few thousand dollars.

Btw, you might want to have this post in introduceyourself rather than anarchism. Just be sure to downvote the annoying bots.

I appreciate the sarcasm.

Actually, I posted this in #introduceyourself and the other categories I thought were relevant, and I put #introduceyourself first, but it listed #anarchism! The .json metadata shows that the order of the tags got scrambled. There's no way to change the tags that I know of yet.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

I thought you were pretty clever to put the first tag as anarchism. Kept forgetting to mention before that my name is Ashley also (as you can see by my user name) So common, although the two of us are not! :D

We're definitely unusual types of Ashleys! I followed your blog. :)
I meant to do #introduceyourself, but screwed up. Now I'm glad it turned out to be #anarchism, because I'll be posting about that too.

Really awesome for you! I've followed you as well. It is easy to find you now as you are on the top of trending! Do you know where to locate the list of people you have followed?

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

@ashleymk, I'm not sure how to see whom you've followed in one place. I was thinking a list would be nice too. Seems like it's not a feature yet.

I have had that same problem in the past and have had the computer gremlin autocorrect "motivation" to "money". Anymore, I tag with only the most accurate tag then edit and add the others. Thanks for the introduction @edgeland
Truly,
H

Ah, the autocorrect gremlin?

$10,000 next in a few hours!

Such craziness.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

within 3 hours you've got $8,687 amazing :))

welcome to steemit, happy steeming!!

yeah it's crazy lol

I was really surprised to see, lol :))

Me too. :o

Hi @edgeland nice to meet you, I think it's a good idea to steemit.

Hi! Me too.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

Nice, welcome to steemit

welcome and enjoy your luck

Hallo @Ashley
How are you today ?

wow good

hello @edgeland and welcome to steemit! 8]

I'm really glad you were able to post this and also the fact that you have taught yourself how to code and enjoy blockchain technology. We are really lucky to be able to post on Steemit Right now. I just did a post about it. It is a must read! https://steemit.com/steem/@brianphobos/why-steemit-users-are-so-lucky-right-now-3-main-reasons

I'll check it out.

Is it just me? or are these "Anarchists" getting more retarded as time goes on?

What do you mean?

@edgeland You anarchists are a plague to the community! you come here with your selfish ideas about society.... you say the most retarded shit ever! you actually believe in the shit that comes out of your mouth! the fact that you listed that retarded quote in your post made me suicidal!
Please just stop it....... Nobody likes an anarchist "Vi no need da gavormantz ve huomanz needz freedom" and then you create a "community" that is actually a goverment and then you just turn communist!
Wasn´t fucking the bitcoin community up enough? now you and your hiveminded friends with your bullshit need to come here and spread your cancer
http://therightstuff.biz/2012/12/15/anarchism-is-retarded/

@stupidteenboy, interesting blog and podcast.
I'm not trying to be a part of any party or ideology. I included this under anarchism because I'm sympathetic to some things people who've called themselves "anarchists" say - most importantly, that decentralization of power is beneficial and that individuals are the highest authority on themselves and their own lives.

Some quotes from your article:

For any society to survive some natural resources must become human property one way or the other. Yet despite this obvious fact of life, the infantile anarchist worldview holds that property ownership is the greatest evil.

Anarchists insist that property must be owned by all people equally and the use of property must be democratically decided by society as whole.

This couldn't be further from what I think. You seem to be talking about communists. This is reasonable:
https://steemit.com/anarchism/@bacchist/noam-chomsky-on-anarchism
but that doesn't mean I agree with Chomsky's visions for society, the actions of the Spanish militants mentioned in the article, or all the "anarchist FAQ" stuff.

Actually, the article is spot-on about how communism often comes from a lofty, intellectual place but it creates a state that enslaves people.
I'm interested in political decentralization and trying to figure out how to achieve it.

@edgeland Alright... I thought that the anarchists had found steemit (If you have ever talked to a true anarchist you will know that they are no different from communists)
and when i saw the "anarchist" tag i made some post saying that anarchists (an example was you) need to be stopped

Awesome! I love hearing stories from early adopters of anything. It's gonna be great to look back on these days when Steem has ascended to the next level! I'll be following your posts! :)

Thanks @trogdor, I'm following you too! Love the name. It'll be interesting to see how Steem develops. :D

Welcome to the main event :)