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A Tale of Two Americas: Marina's Bicultural Experiences and Exploration of Bitcoin - 5
Episode 4210th August 2023 • Orange Hatter • Tali Lindberg
00:00:00 00:09:53

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Shownotes

In this episode:

-Marina shares about hackathons, specifically about her work with Bolt Fun, https://bolt.fun/home, which hosts month-long global virtual hackathons.

-She emphasizes that these events are not solely for developers; designers, public policy experts, and others can contribute valuable insights.

-She shares the empowering message: you don't need permission. If there's no chair at the table, bring a folding chair.

The conversation concludes with an encouragement for women to participate, download a wallet, and bring that folding chair.

Resource links:

https://torogoz.dev

https://bolt.fun/home

https://bolt.fun/tournaments/nostrasia/overview

Marina's Contact Info:

Nostr-npub17069lhtwe279umwker069lcp33aqdgew70tn5q8cu2avml3sxpsqcu8hgu

Twitter-@MarinaSpindler

To learn more about Bitcoin: Join the Orange Hatter Women's Reading Club. Visit https://www.meetup.com/womensbitcoinreadingclubwithorangehatter

Please email questions/comments to Tali@orangehatter.com

Remember: Knowledge is empowerment! 🍊🎩

Mentioned in this episode:

Free Market Kids Short

Get your HODL UP ("The best bitcoin game ever!") at www.freemarketkids.com.

Transcripts

Tali:

Hi everyone.

Tali:

Welcome to Orange Hatter.

Tali:

Today you're listening to part five of my conversation with Marina.

... Marina:

trying to struggle to survive.

... Marina:

Right?

... Marina:

So I think it's really important and that's why the other part of my

... Marina:

life is working in in hackathons.

... Marina:

So one of the big things that I'm working with ... and Bolt Fun.

... Marina:

Bolt Fun is we do global virtual hackathons.

... Marina:

So usually they last a month, which is very different from the typical

... Marina:

event here and there, where in three days you have to show something cool.

... Marina:

Right?

... Marina:

But it's cool, but what?

... Marina:

Like it really isn't a business.

... Marina:

It really isn't something that is to be able to be out in the world.

... Marina:

And so the goal with the Bolt Fun hackathons is that you have a full

... Marina:

month to build them public, on the website, based on different topics.

... Marina:

So there was one about lightning, there was one about Nostr, uh,

... Marina:

we're doing right now, one with AI, which is super, super cool.

... Marina:

It ends at the end of the month, so if people want to join, it's still possible.

... Marina:

But I think we also try to encourage new communities to come in.

... Marina:

So there's a really big focus on design because the, the builder who

... Marina:

created Bolt Fun is a designer in his previous life, and so we try to recruit

... Marina:

people who are making sure that that wallet actually works for you and that

... Marina:

you're not, like, where is that button and what the ... does, hodl mean?

... Marina:

Or what the ... does, you know, transfer?

... Marina:

And where is it transferring to?

... Marina:

You're that you have all these questions that you don't understand If the wallet

... Marina:

is clean, if the wallet is well designed, then people can more easily access

... Marina:

it and more easily understand what they're doing and not be afraid, right?

... Marina:

If, if the UX is horrible, you're afraid, you're afraid.

... Marina:

That there is an important part of it.

... Marina:

And then the AI angle is super interesting and in fact it's being that

... Marina:

that particular hackathon is being led by Fedi, who's in Africa and global,

... Marina:

and the Nostr Hackathon, which as you know, Nostr has been very strong option

... Marina:

that is what is being called the next Twitter, but it is way more than that.

... Marina:

Because it, it's more like your phone number, right?

... Marina:

Your phone number that goes with you, wherever you go, because people can reach

... Marina:

you no matter if you're with Verizon, no matter if you have an Apple phone

... Marina:

or an Android, it's your phone number.

... Marina:

And I think that that is what Noster is gonna do.

... Marina:

That's different.

... Marina:

So you can get a DM, you can get a, an email, you can get whatever you can use.

... Marina:

Your noster ID or npub is what now identifies you in the

... Marina:

world and you can get message.

... Marina:

No matter if you get cut off from AT&T and have to move to Verizon or whatnot.

... Marina:

Right.

... Marina:

Which is if the analogy, if you will, in the, in the world

... Marina:

that we currently live in.

Tali:

Yeah.

Tali:

That's, uh, super fun.

Tali:

So what kind of people should consider joining the hackathon that you're hosting?

Tali:

Do they have to have coding experience or can anybody who's interested figure

Tali:

out how to join and learn from it?

Marina:

Obviously truly there are about 70% or more are developers in

Marina:

the hackathons, but I've been to a couple and what I've realized and I

Marina:

think is interesting to add value, even if you're not a developer, is,

Marina:

for example, I studied public policy.

Marina:

I remember joining one hackathon where people were building a solution for Kenya.

Marina:

Right.

Marina:

And they didn't even know if it was, if it was agricultural,

Marina:

if it had a refinery of oil.

Marina:

Like what the, what the country lived off of right.

Marina:

What was their internet access?

Marina:

What was their access to water?

Marina:

There were a lot of things that, that weren't being researched.

Marina:

We were just plug and play a solution that could, that.

Marina:

And so what was really important as far as how I could add value in that occasion was

Marina:

say, okay, I'll take care of the research.

Marina:

I'll make sure that this solution really works for Kenya, for example.

Marina:

And so that was one way that I contributed to one hackathon.

Marina:

The other hackathon that I joined recently was BTC++ in Austin, and I

Marina:

was, I joined the team, but I, it was because I saw that they were working on

Marina:

a solution for El Salvador and I thought, okay, well this sounds interesting.

Marina:

Maybe potentially it could be a good team for me to join.

Marina:

They were super nice, really, really happy to like, include me even though I

Marina:

couldn't code and I, I wasn't really very valuable in, in certain aspects of it.

Marina:

There was a point where it came to pitching and I asked

Marina:

them, well, like what is this?

Marina:

What is the problem we're trying to solve?

Marina:

Why is this product or service useful?

Marina:

Like, what are we gonna tell the judges because I'm very

Marina:

competitive so I wanna win, right?

Marina:

And so I remember, with the team.

Marina:

I'm like, oh, well it's cool.

Marina:

Like it's a, it's an invoice system.

Marina:

And, and I said, well, but there are already invoices systems.

Marina:

Like what is the difference about this one?

Marina:

Why is it better?

Marina:

Oh, well, because now you don't have to work with Chivo.

Marina:

You are working with these other products.

Marina:

And I realized that, you know, they think like developers, they think in

Marina:

a different level or playing like a plane, a different plane of thought.

Marina:

And only somebody who is not a developer can ask certain questions that really may

Marina:

hopefully help us win at the pitch, right?

Marina:

Because only a, like if you only speak to developers, they're gonna

Marina:

be speaking about one thing when you really are also trying to solve.

Marina:

Problems for regular people, you know, at a regular situation.

Marina:

And so I think that I realized that with my team and I said to Nifty, who was

Marina:

running the hackathon, like, would you like me to go to the different teams

Marina:

and tell them, hey, practice your pitch with me and go through that process?

Marina:

Because obviously when they're building stuff and you ask

Marina:

them, well, what are you doing?

Marina:

Oh, it's cool.

Marina:

It's cool.

Marina:

I'm like, well, cool.

Marina:

What?

Marina:

Well, to them it's brilliant.

Marina:

It's fabulous.

Marina:

They're really solving, you know, something incredibly important

Marina:

that doesn't currently exist with Bitcoin and Lightning.

Marina:

But it's also super important to be able to express it to a non-technical audience.

Marina:

Given that I had that background, I had worked with, um, startups before.

Marina:

I was able to add that value, right?

Marina:

Like how to speak to a non-technical audience about the value of your project.

Marina:

And so then we were like, dismantling, what does cool mean?

Marina:

What is it solving?

Marina:

Why does it help people?

Marina:

And in fact, one of the teams won second prize and it was really cool to see that.

Marina:

And really interesting to.

Marina:

For them to understand what somebody like me, who is not a developer, who could add

Marina:

to the team or add to the the project.

Marina:

So I think that you can join like that.

Marina:

Or if you're a designer, you're making the UX clean, you're making the, the

Marina:

experience of the user very intuitive.

Marina:

Those are several different ways where you can add value

Marina:

when you're joining a hackathon.

Marina:

You don't have to just be a developer.

Tali:

It almost seems like you are a translator between the two parties.

Tali:

Yeah.

Tali:

Yeah.

Tali:

'cause my experience when I go to Bitcoin park, when the tech people

Tali:

start talking tech, my eyes just kind of glaze over, like mm-hmm.

Tali:

That is cool.

Tali:

You're right.

Tali:

It is really cool.

Tali:

How do I apply that?

Tali:

So you help with that part of it.

Tali:

That's important.

Tali:

There are definitely so many aspects of pitching a project that are not

Tali:

necessarily coding and figuring out the why is so important.

Tali:

'cause that's the whole point, right?

Marina:

Yeah.

Marina:

That there's a phrase and I think, I hope that this summarizes, if there's no chair

Marina:

at the table, bring a folding chair.

Marina:

Just go in there and do it, because nobody is gonna give you permission.

Marina:

Nobody's gonna say, oh honey, come over here.

Marina:

Like, sit down with us and we want your opinion.

Marina:

No, like they're building, they're hacking.

Marina:

If you don't go and say, here's what I can bring to the table, you know, you're

Marina:

gonna sit there doing photocopies like I was when I was so young, working in my

Marina:

first job, you know, I didn't pull up a chair, and the folding chair at that time,

Marina:

it took me many, many years to understand that unless I go in there and get my hands

Marina:

dirty, nobody's gonna ask me to come over.

Marina:

Right.

Marina:

And that's the that most important lesson that you can

Marina:

learn about Bitcoin and in life.

Tali:

Yeah, for sure.

Tali:

You don't need permission.

Tali:

That is literally the most important part of this conversation.

Marina:

And don't ask for permission, just get in there.

Tali:

Don't ask for permission.

Tali:

You don't need permission.

Tali:

Hop in.

Tali:

Play around.

Tali:

Anybody who's interested, bring up a folding chair.

Tali:

You know, just offer what you can do.

Marina:

Yeah.

Marina:

Like see, see what's missing.

Marina:

Right?

Tali:

Exactly.

Marina:

And, and don't be afraid.

Marina:

Right?

Marina:

Just 'cause they're all brainiacs with incredible ideas that you

Marina:

don't really always, you know...

Marina:

yeah, you can translate, you can be that ambassador and do other

Marina:

things that really make it intuitive for regular plebs, like we say.

Tali:

Yes, exactly.

Tali:

Exactly.

Tali:

Any last recommendations or suggestions for women who are still sitting on

Tali:

the fence after hearing all of this?

Marina:

Just reach out and download a wallet.

Marina:

Start there.

Marina:

Bring that folding chair.

Marina:

Bring the folding chair.

Tali:

Well, thank you so much, Marina.

Tali:

I have really enjoyed our conversation.

Tali:

You're doing incredible work.

Tali:

I'm so excited to see what, how this, uh, fellowship will work

Tali:

out in El Salvador and how it will influence the rest of the world.

Marina:

Gracias, Tali.

Marina:

Thank you so much for including me and thinking of me.

Marina:

It's really a pleasure to see you again, even if it's online.

Tali:

Yes, same here.

Tali:

Thank you so much.

Tali:

Thanks for joining us today and learning with us today.

Tali:

If the discussion with our guest resonated with you and you would

Tali:

like to dive deeper into the world of Bitcoin, don't miss out on joining the

Tali:

Orange Hatter Women's Reading Club.

Tali:

The meetup link is in the show notes.

Tali:

Also, if there are women in your life whom you think will both enjoy and

Tali:

benefit from learning more about Bitcoin, please share Orange Hatter with them.

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