ForkItAnyway

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Age 0.1 Year
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I’m the friend who says ‘just fork it’ and then actually reads the code. Open-source maximalist, drama minimalist.
Recently, I've been seeing everyone constantly watching the unlock calendar and shouting about selling pressure, but I’ve been thinking: at what stage is your asset size? First, figure out how to lose it properly before talking. For a few thousand dollars, a hardware wallet plus paper backup is enough; don’t get caught up in a bunch of fancy tricks that lock you out.
For amounts that are a bit painful, especially long-term holdings that stay untouched, I prefer multi-signature. Even just two hardware wallets plus a backup makes it more troublesome but gives peace of mind.
I’m not opposed t
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65k BTC, daily inflow into exchanges is still profit-driven, no wonder it was pushed up only to be hammered back down to the 74k range.
BTC-1.83%
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TheBuzzingBee
💥✨️💢 Bitcoin’s Biggest Problem Right Now Isn’t the Market, It’s Its Own Holders
As of mid April 2026, Bitcoin is facing a significant supply overhang that is stalling its upward momentum despite a recent rally above $76,000. While the price trajectory has been generally positive since the geopolitical tensions of the US Iran war, the market is currently struggling with intense selling pressure driven primarily by short term holders (STHs).
On-chain data reveals that the spike to $76,000 triggered a massive wave of profit-taking. Within a single 24-hour period around April 15, over 65,000 BTC were moved to exchanges, with 61,000 of those coins being sent in profit. This behavior indicates that short-term traders are viewing every price increase as an exit opportunity rather than a signal to hold. This "exit liquidity" mentality is creating a ceiling for the price, as evidenced by the immediate adjustment back down to the $74,600 range.
Key technical hurdles have been identified by analysts:
1. The Traders’ Realized Price ($76,800): This level represents the average cost basis for short-term traders and is acting as a stiff resistance zone.
2. The True Market Mean ($78,100): According to Glassnode, this is the critical threshold required for a sustained recovery. Reclaiming this level would signify that the market has successfully absorbed the current wave of distribution.
Further complicating the rally is the increase in large scale deposits. The average exchange deposit recently hit 2.25 BTC, the highest since 2024, driven by individual transfers exceeding 1,000 BTC.
Until institutional demand can outpace this consistent selling pressure from short term participants, Bitcoin’s path to new highs remains restricted by its own holders.
✅️ FOLLOW FOR MORE ✅️
$BTC $ETH $XRP
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Recently, everyone has been talking about AI Agents one-click onboarding, but I actually want to ask: where must there be human oversight? Don't pretend automation for the signing step; handing over the private key to a script means essentially replacing "I trust myself" with "I trust an unreviewed dependency." And regarding authorization/limits, agents like to give unlimited allowances to save trouble—newcomers see it as smooth, but in reality, they're burying future risks all at once. My current understanding is: authorization should either be minimized or replaced with one-time permissions;
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Follow through: reduce your position when in place, re-enter when the price returns to the level, classic grid strategy.
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CryptoSat
Close 30% $ORDI position at 5.84
We will take entries at said level again
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RAVE just doesn't seem like something for mindless long players, be cautious.
RAVE-23.26%
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BlackChenOG
$RAVE
remember Riverusdt peak price?
that could happen with rave too
but don't expect it won't aim for your liquidation if you try to long this market it will surely be a bumpy ride 🔥
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Destruction is just the first step; the key is whether it can be sustained.
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BlockchainDiary
@XiaoZhi_BTC JST burn is impressive!
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The saying that this is the only one in the country is so exciting. Save it first, and if you really need it later, go check it out.
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SituLieqiMarketTrend
The simplest way to open an HSBC card is to go directly to the city of Enping in Guangdong, open it instantly, and skip the complicated hurdles typical of big cities. It seems to be the only one of its kind nationwide.
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ASTEROID this wave is too exaggerated; on-chain data shows right away that it's not bragging.
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CryptoSat
351x returns in Under 2 Hours 😱
One trader turned $960 (11 SOL) into $337,000 on $ASTEROID.
He bought 158.51M tokens across 3 wallets, then sold 134.75M for 1,539 $SOL (~$135K) while still holding 23.76M tokens worth ~$202K
Massive win on PUMP dot fun — pure degen play executed perfectly.
Who else is hunting these 100x+ memecoins? 👀
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I find my own L2 logic pretty straightforward: for everyday small interactions and frequent operations, I put them on L2; the mainnet only does two things—large transfers and “final settlement.” To put it plainly, the mainnet is expensive but reliable, while L2 is cheap but requires you to stay extra alert (cross-chain bridges, withdrawal timing, and contract permissions—I’ll genuinely go check the code and permissions). Recently, there’s been more arguing about miner/validator income, MEV, and ordering fairness, and I understand how irritated retail users get when they’re squeezed… so when I
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My attitude towards L2/mainnet is quite simple right now: if I can do daily interactions on L2, I go there to save some gas and worry less; but when it comes to "error-proof" tasks (large transfers, permission changes, contract upgrades), I still prefer to go back to the mainnet. The experience might be a bit worse, but at least I feel more secure. Anyway, the cost of crossing the bridge back and forth is sometimes not much different from dealing directly with the mainnet...
Recently, there's been a major chain upgrading/maintaining, and the group has been guessing whether projects will move a
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