Bitcoin found some short-term support around $61,000. That's slightly above the February low of just under $60,000. It makes sense that there would be some initial support there. So far it's bounced over $2,000 off that low. Let's see how long it lasts.
Intersect Weekly Update #113 is here 👀 📖
Why so long? Because there's a lot happening across the ecosystem right now!
This week's edition includes:
🔹 van Rossem upgrade progress
🔹 Hydra voting for the 2026 budget process
🔹 Midgard milestone delivery
🔹 Welcoming Tangem as a new Enterprise Member
🔹 A look at the connective work Intersect carries out across the ecosystem every day
These updates are designed to be a reliable reference point you can return to week after week to stay informed on governance, coordination, delivery, and ecosystem activity.
Read it https://t.co/JR7aJ2UsM8
I just voted YES on both the Cardano Summit and Token 2049 proposals.
The Token2049 proposal was an easy yes, as it is consistent with getting Cardano in front of eyeballs it hasn't been in front of before.
The Summit was a harder yes. Ultimately, the decider for me was that the @Cardano_CF was receptive to feedback and revised their proposal, and that the cost of the summit is trending down year over year.
Cardano is at a key inflection point. We're launching so many cool new things (at both the application and capability layer) in 2026, and if we don't spend boldly to highlight those things, and highlight them with people *outside* of the Cardano community, it will mean very little.
To both of the proposers of the above proposals, *please* make sure that these events are constantly beating the drum about ecosystem stars, strengths, and new capabilities, and don't turn into luke-warm repetitions of past refrains that everyone has already heard before.
You can find my full justifications on my blog, at https://t.co/wtBvAD6cTV
The outline of the UK's largest chalk hill figure, the Cerne Abbas Giant, is getting a revamp with 17 tonnes (18.7 tons) of wet chalk. The giant is etched on the hillside above Cerne Abbas, a village in Dorset, England. The origins are unknown, but research by nature conservation charity, the National Trust, suggests the giant was carved between 700 to 1100 AD.