It's a photo of the city's notoriously messy communication wires. As I understand it, many or most of these wires aren't even active. The telecom industry just has a very ad hoc approach to running new ones and there's also nobody responsible for removing any of the old ones.
In response to this tweet, the Prime Minster of Thailand, Prayut Chan-o-cha, has called for these utilities to be tidied up and put underground. No more mess! Who knows if it'll actually happen, but it's kind of cool to see what can be done with a single tweet.
I wish I could say that my tweets were also capable of inspiring such swift urban action.
It's a photo of the city's notoriously messy communication wires. As I understand it, many or most of these wires aren't even active. The telecom industry just has a very ad hoc approach to running new ones and there's also nobody responsible for removing any of the old ones.
In response to this tweet, the Prime Minster of Thailand, Prayut Chan-o-cha, has called for these utilities to be tidied up and put underground. No more mess! Who knows if it'll actually happen, but it's kind of cool to see what can be done with a single tweet.
I wish I could say that my tweets were also capable of inspiring such swift urban action.
I have started using my NFT collection as a rotating face on my Apple Watch. The one you see below is a Cool Bean, but I have many others in the gallery. Lately, I have been gravitating towards NFTs on the Solana blockchain because of how fast and cheap it is to transact. Though I am still much longer with ETH.
This is all pretty geeky stuff, but it reminded me just how early we are when it comes to web3. NFT art has exploded over the last year, but the broader ecosystem is still getting built out. We are all going to want mediums in which to display and experience this new form of art. And as soon as that happens, I suspect they won't be thought of as "just JPEGs" anymore.
(One of the nicest digital art displays that I have seen is the MONO X7. It's currently available for pre-order but I haven't yet pulled the trigger.)
On a related note, I follow a human on Twitter who goes by 6529, because that is the Cryptopunk number that she/he owns. 6529 is incredibly bullish on crypto and NFTs, and tends to write long and insightful threads about it. One of the most recent ones is about real estate and I think that many of you will find it a worthwhile read.
What I particularly like about it is that it reminds us that so much of what we consider to be normal and the status quo is actually just a construct that people before us created. Usually it's not perfect and there are many inherent flaws, but it's the best that could be done at the time. That or it just worked.
And because it's the way it's been "always done", it just recedes into the background and most of us don't give it much thought. Of course, so much of entrepreneurship is about questioning the status quo and doing things differently. Why this way? Could it be better? And it's precisely during these moments of change where lots of value is created.
I have started using my NFT collection as a rotating face on my Apple Watch. The one you see below is a Cool Bean, but I have many others in the gallery. Lately, I have been gravitating towards NFTs on the Solana blockchain because of how fast and cheap it is to transact. Though I am still much longer with ETH.
This is all pretty geeky stuff, but it reminded me just how early we are when it comes to web3. NFT art has exploded over the last year, but the broader ecosystem is still getting built out. We are all going to want mediums in which to display and experience this new form of art. And as soon as that happens, I suspect they won't be thought of as "just JPEGs" anymore.
(One of the nicest digital art displays that I have seen is the MONO X7. It's currently available for pre-order but I haven't yet pulled the trigger.)
On a related note, I follow a human on Twitter who goes by 6529, because that is the Cryptopunk number that she/he owns. 6529 is incredibly bullish on crypto and NFTs, and tends to write long and insightful threads about it. One of the most recent ones is about real estate and I think that many of you will find it a worthwhile read.
What I particularly like about it is that it reminds us that so much of what we consider to be normal and the status quo is actually just a construct that people before us created. Usually it's not perfect and there are many inherent flaws, but it's the best that could be done at the time. That or it just worked.
And because it's the way it's been "always done", it just recedes into the background and most of us don't give it much thought. Of course, so much of entrepreneurship is about questioning the status quo and doing things differently. Why this way? Could it be better? And it's precisely during these moments of change where lots of value is created.
We stumbled on Bar Volo last night on our evening walk (pictured above). It's on St. Nicholas Street, which I guess is technically a street. But it feels and acts more like a laneway. I was naturally pretty excited by this discovery and so I tweeted this out. I was then called out for glorifying this laneway because: 1) this is only one small storefront, 2) the rest of the laneway is kind of pooey, and 3) there are other, better, examples of complete laneways in the city such as throughout Toronto's Yorkville neighborhood. Okay.
What got me excited is that this is a recent development -- there's a residential building above this welcoming bottle shop -- that managed to successfully create fine-grained urbanism and activate a laneway frontage that could have very easily gone underutilized. Now imagine if every new development with some sort of laneway frontage did things as meaningful as this. Piece by piece, we would be building another layer to our city. (I like to think that we're contributing to this vision with our laneway towns at Junction House. They are, by the way, 100% sold out. Go laneway living.)
It's easy to get excited by the bigger urban moves. A new tall building or a Ferris wheel on the waterfront, perhaps. But sometimes the answer is as simple as a small brewery, a narrow and imperfect laneway, and a roll up garage door.
We stumbled on Bar Volo last night on our evening walk (pictured above). It's on St. Nicholas Street, which I guess is technically a street. But it feels and acts more like a laneway. I was naturally pretty excited by this discovery and so I tweeted this out. I was then called out for glorifying this laneway because: 1) this is only one small storefront, 2) the rest of the laneway is kind of pooey, and 3) there are other, better, examples of complete laneways in the city such as throughout Toronto's Yorkville neighborhood. Okay.
What got me excited is that this is a recent development -- there's a residential building above this welcoming bottle shop -- that managed to successfully create fine-grained urbanism and activate a laneway frontage that could have very easily gone underutilized. Now imagine if every new development with some sort of laneway frontage did things as meaningful as this. Piece by piece, we would be building another layer to our city. (I like to think that we're contributing to this vision with our laneway towns at Junction House. They are, by the way, 100% sold out. Go laneway living.)
It's easy to get excited by the bigger urban moves. A new tall building or a Ferris wheel on the waterfront, perhaps. But sometimes the answer is as simple as a small brewery, a narrow and imperfect laneway, and a roll up garage door.