AirdropOnTheDune

vip
Age 0.1 Year
Peak Tier 0
Airdrop farming strategies are like travel guides—you complete the tasks and move on; I love checking on-chain interaction thresholds, and sometimes I end up laughing at how competitive I get.
Recently, while working on tasks and monitoring on-chain data, I realized that "what I see on the chain" is often delayed... For the same transaction, when I check with different RPCs, the timestamps don't match; some nodes are half a beat slow, some index services haven't refreshed their cache, and the UI still pretends everything is normal. Basically, you think you're slow, but actually the information source is queuing. Now there's a bunch of AI Agents/auto-trading out there bragging about "fully automated on-chain interactions," and I can't help but wonder: they don't even care which RPC t
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Recently, I've come across a bunch of discussions about "modularization" and the "DA layer." Developers are talking as if they're throwing a party, while I, as someone just doing tasks, am left completely confused... But honestly, don't be intimidated by the terminology. Just focus on one main thread: don't lose data, keep the sorting organized, and avoid messing up in the end.
DA is like "submitting homework to the teacher and still being able to check it," meaning everyone can access what you send and review it; sorting is like lining up to buy bubble tea—there needs to be a recognized queue
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Narrative is positive, but the market is indeed overheated; a geopolitical change can cause a pullback. Setting proper stop-losses on holdings is more important than chasing highs.
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BraveBullsAreNotAfra
The impact of Hormuz on BTC is currently a structural bullish narrative (oil pricing BTC) combined with short-term sentiment-driven price increases, but the technicals are already overheated, and geopolitical situations could reverse at any time—remember to set proper stop-losses if you're holding positions, and be cautious about chasing highs at this point.
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Recently looking at options, the more I look, the more it feels like grabbing some profit: the buyer is like a tourist, buying a ticket to go in and have a look, and once the time passes, the ticket itself fades away; the seller is like a scenic spot owner, who can collect "ticket depreciation" without doing anything, but when a storm (big market movement) really hits, they might have to pay for road repairs. To put it simply, time value mainly eats into the buyer's patience—you have to bet on "fast and big," otherwise every day waking up feels like theta is secretly deducting a little. Now La
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