I’m actually curious as to what people want or expect from live vine in the United States of America (USA)?
Everyone seems to have an opinion of details or policy changes… which I agree with, or disagree with. I have some of my own…
What are the issues or solutions you have in mind?
At Abundant Mines, we’re noticing a trend.
More real estate investors are shifting their capital into something more powerful, Bitcoin mining.
For decades, we’ve been told real estate is the ultimate path to wealth.
Buy property.
Build equity.
Live the American dream.
But today, that path isn’t working like it used to.
Interest rates are high.
Home prices are out of reach.
Rental income is unpredictable.
Did you know mining works a lot like real estate?
You own a tangible asset, real mining machines, strategically located, generating income over time. You get long-term growth, passive cash flow, and tax advantages, just like property.
But, unlike real estate, mining has no tenants, no repairs, no vacancies.
Your machines work 24/7, accumulating Bitcoin.
Stop pouring money into properties that tie you down and underperform.
There’s no time like the present to rethink what a truly productive asset looks like in the digital age.
In 2004, LEGO was on the brink of bankruptcy.
A $230 million loss the year before. Global sales had fallen 29% in a year.
The board brought in a 34-year-old to save it.
His first move was not a strategy deck. It was something most CEOs would never do.
Oh how the world is changing. I think the premise of AI and robots supporting us or taking over the day to day mechanical activities like this, coffee, fast food, etc has been here for awhile. Now implementing AI along side it will only make it more feasible.
Time moves fast.
So San Francisco. An @openclaw run vending machine.
Met @cvander who built it.
At @frontiertower which is a high rise in San Francisco stuffed with startups.
BREAKING: SQUARE TO AUTO-ENABLE BITCOIN PAYMENTS FOR MILLIONS OF SELLERS
Square will auto-enable Bitcoin payments for all eligible sellers starting March 30, 2026, according to an updated Terms of Service notice sent to users.
The change means millions of businesses using Square could soon begin accepting Bitcoin by default, rather than opting in manually.
The rollout is part of Block’s broader push to integrate Bitcoin payments across its ecosystem, leveraging the Lightning Network for fast, low-cost transactions.
Sellers will still have the option to disable the feature or automatically convert Bitcoin to USD at the point of sale.
With Square powering millions of merchants globally, this marks a major step toward making Bitcoin a standard payment method in everyday commerce.