I believe Blockchain/Crypto, DID/VC, and LLM/AI will be among the most important building blocks of software engineering over the next decade.
This moment reminds me of the early 2000s, when many people saw the Internet as little more than a bubble, a scam, or a source of adult content.
Today, many view blockchain and crypto as casinos, scams, and pump-and-dump schemes.
The noise is different. The pattern is the same.
Getting on the right side of technological shifts is one of the most important first principles.
@JohnSmi77078444@Morrigan_Astro Go ahead and stick stubbornly to whatever it is you like to think I really don't care how disconnected you make yourself to reality. It's your own problem after all.
Last night, I read the entirety of C.S. Lewis' The Screwtape Letters. It's a novel told in the form of letters written by a demon to another demon instructing him on ways to manipulate his "patient" to do evil.
This one quote sounded familiar.
2011 study by Brian G. Skotko et al. (published in the American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A), which surveyed 284 people with DS (ages 12+) from U.S. Down syndrome organizations using validated, accessible questionnaires.
• ~99% said they were happy with their lives.
• 97% liked who they are.
• 96% liked how they look.
• ~99% expressed love for their families; 97% liked their brothers and sisters.
• Most felt they could make friends easily (though social challenges were noted for some, often tied to living situations).
• In qualitative responses, participants encouraged parents to love and value children with DS, describing their own lives positively and sharing similar hopes/dreams as others.
A 2011 study by Brian G. Skotko et al. (published in the American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A), which surveyed 284 people with DS (ages 12+) from U.S. Down syndrome organizations using validated, accessible questionnaires.
• ~99% said they were happy with their lives.
• 97% liked who they are.
• 96% liked how they look.
• ~99% expressed love for their families; 97% liked their brothers and sisters.
• Most felt they could make friends easily (though social challenges were noted for some, often tied to living situations).
• In qualitative responses, participants encouraged parents to love and value children with DS, describing their own lives positively and sharing similar hopes/dreams as others.
@KeithWoodsYT I did, but I'm not going to waste time educating you on what it said. What I said is directly resulting from what your cited source finds.
@Just_ebube Your faith in God is lacking. If you trusted God's plan rather than your own understanding you wouldn't do something like this. You're a weak Christian. Do better.