pull down to refresh

So most of us are half way (or less) down the Bitcoin rabbit hole. Here’s a pic of another rabbit hole I occasionally fall into.
What about you? What’s a subject you find yourself coming back to learn more about just when you thought you were becoming knowledgable?
171 sats \ 8 replies \ @Scoresby 5h
I fell hard down the arctic exploration rabbit hole. At first it was just the adventure stories, people surviving in insane circumstances, but then a love of the ice and the way it makes our natural world so alien, and then finally admiration of the freedom comes with the arctic regions: no one is there to tell you what to do.
reply
121 sats \ 3 replies \ @jasonb OP 4h
Ever seen James Carpenter’s “The Thing?” It’s one of my favorites movies.
reply
69 sats \ 2 replies \ @Scoresby 4h
The thing is awesome. Excellent movie!
reply
50 sats \ 1 reply \ @Car 2h
Love how the sequel went right into the original 👌
reply
There’s a sequel?!?! And it’s good?!
reply
Is there a particular book you’d recommend, by the way?
reply
reply
Thanks!
reply
If you haven't seen this I believe you'll like it https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pjq7Gl_hhPY
Made me want to know more of those stories.
reply
50 sats \ 5 replies \ @k00b 52m
These days I try to stay away from non-work related rabbit holes, but here's some that I enjoyed over the years:
  • Biohacking-ish things from 2015-2020 - saunas, routines, supplements, ketosis, fasting, blood tests. That's one thing I can see myself coming back to.
  • I dipped a toe in the pickup artist scene around the same time. Mating psychology is a lot of fun to learn about.
  • Right out of high school I got really into telescope design, intending to study astrophysics and unable to afford a decent telescope, so I started planning to make my own.
  • Graffiti and oil painting. Although that wasn't much of a rabbit hole. I just did it.
  • Anarchism and political philosophy not long after.
  • Fashion and interior decorating for a time.
  • I've grown weed a few times over the years and really enjoyed messing with soil composition, genetics, environment.
  • Fermentation.
  • Smoking meat.
  • Hamburgers.
reply
50 sats \ 1 reply \ @jasonb OP 40m
Graffiti and oil painting
You would have been west coast when doing this? Whats that scene like there?
reply
50 sats \ 0 replies \ @k00b 33m
California. I was never in a scene. Musicians are lucky in that their art is more social than most.
Also my stint was short. I only did ~4 significant tags: two water towers, one billboard, the exterior of an abandoned warehouse. Oil painting didn't last more than a year. I only produced three complete paintings.
tbh most of my rabbit holes are me exploring the entryway pretty thoroughly more than anything.
reply
50 sats \ 1 reply \ @jasonb OP 44m
When you say make your own telescope, does that include figuring out how to make lenses? That sounds really cool but extremely ambitious.
reply
50 sats \ 0 replies \ @k00b 41m
I was going to make everything except for the lenses and mirrors. Making lenses and mirrors would probably require a lab of some kind.
reply
What made you give up the pursuit of astrophysics?
reply
33 sats \ 0 replies \ @DarthCoin 5h
If you do not read this "rabbit hole" entirely, all the rest are meaningless.
reply
50 sats \ 1 reply \ @winteryeti 1h
GPU mining was definitely my rabbit hole, but it's still fun to tinker with.
reply
Nice!
reply
Pizzagate. I definitely think something nefarious was going on with that pizza store, though I disagree with some of the more wild claims about child sacrifice and cannibalism.
Election rigging against Trump. Some data patterns did not sit well with me and to this day I have not seen a satisfactory explanation. Unfortunately, I don't have access to the historical data to dig further.
Covid vaccine skepticism. This is actually a bit more mainstream, since many people don't trust the vaccines. The studies used to claim that the vaccines were "safe and effective" were not well done studies.
@delete in 24 hours
reply
reply
Thanks to Bitcoiners copying the gold bug "sound money" narrative, I've fallen into the rabbit hole of trying to find out what exactly went on prior to 1971, basically: how did the gold standard fail.
Because it did fail. But what really happened. What were the triggers in practice. And how can we detect such scenarios in a digital world?
It goes very slow because I'm digging up memoirs from politicians in the 60s. Some are awesome because they had great correspondence on the topic. Others have been a waste of my time. But maybe, just maybe, can it help. Because thinking that there will be a bitcoin standard (which I personally don't think likely) and then there will be that forever, would probably be wishful thinking.
reply
i have a series-in-progress in my bio, deocculting parasitology in an entertaining manner;
everything is intricately connected; the other ones are:
reply
More rabbit hole inspiration (always fun question!)
reply