Confessions of a still very much the 'Newbie'

in #hivelast month (edited)

When it comes to hive, blogging, and crypto I've been a bit slow on the uptake.

I was reminded last month that back in 2013, when I'd first started a Carnival band in Trinidad, I had a client ask if they could pay for their carnival costume using Bitcoin. At the time, I had no understanding of crypto, of how to hold onto them, what a wallet was, and as I needed the liquid cash inflow, I declined.

Bitcoin was valued at 1 BTC = £11.
Had I accepted them and held onto them, right now I'd be sitting on £3.5 m.
Hindsight is always 20/20. Spilt milk and all that.


How to vote, power up, power down, how much you vote, etc... it's all still a bit of a foreign language at the moment.Roll forward to the latter part of 2019, as we first approached lockdown, and a friend of mine @diveratt encouraged me to come onto Ecency / Hive. Over the last five years I've dipped in and out but never really got to grips with how it works.

That said. Having decided to move away from mainstream Social Misleadinger, I'm hoping to dedicate a lot more focus toward blogging and posting here. Mostly travel and photo related.

Particularly as I learn more about communities, tags, hive, blogging, and how it all works.

After five years, I'm still very much a 'Newbie'
Tips, hints, guides, constructive criticism, and advice are most welcome.

Sort:  

Hi there @ripebanana , great to see a friend of @diveratt and another Brit returning to Hive, and help boost our numbers. @steevc runs a monthly list of Brits, I'm sure he'll be glad to add you on it.

Tips, hints, guides, constructive criticism, and advice are most welcome.

The top one is definitely engagement, for people to get to know you and your existence. Hive isn't the biggest platform, but there's still quite a lot of content created every day. It's easy for your content to get lost in the sea if no more knows you're around. Good luck!

Loading...