Still Learning After All These Years
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Last June, a sailing buddy (and aerospace engineer) asked if I could check out a family friendās ābitcoin.ā He forwarded me an image of a plastic bitcoin wallet held with a private key partially obscured. The family friend had received the card as some sort of āgimmick at a conferenceā and tossed it in a drawer.
This is one of those moments where I find imposter syndrome perched on my shoulder, nodding its head, lips pursed. Two years in the business preceded by another two monkeying around in my personal account didnāt give me nearly enough crypto cred to say, āOh, yeah, wow. I remember these.ā Fine, Iām a noob. I made a no-promises disclaimer and quickly changed the subject.

Back home, I opened the image and set to work with the solemn determination of Quincy, M.E. (although forensic examination is an inapt metaphor, given the complete absence of foul play). How did these ancient wallets work? If the private key is printed on the card, how is that secure? I knew BIP39, but whatās BIP38?
Learning ensued. Then, I checked the bitcoin blockchain and noted that exactly one bitcoin had been moved to this address nine-and-a-half years earlier, when a bitcoin fetched just over $325. No activity since. As for the obscured BIP38 āprivateā key, you need a passphrase to decrypt it. Uh-oh. Did the family friend save the passphrase for ten years, on a Post-itĀ® now worth $100,000?
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This week, we were out to see a show with a different group of friends. I offered to reimburse them for our tickets with crypto. āSet up a Phantom wallet, copy and securely store the seed phrase, and send me your Ethereum address. Iāll pay you in ether or USDC, your choice.ā
I saw all the faces. Chuckle, eyeroll, are you serious, wait-a-minute, hmmm, why not, OK! Iām still waiting for that Ethereum address, but I have no doubt this will happen. Another āgimmick,ā ten years later.
Why ETH or USDC? Why not bitcoin? In 2025, bitcoin is no longer a mystery. Folks get it, and if they are thinking about buying a digital asset, theyāll find bitcoin on many shelves. Itās a store of value. Itās scarce. As more buyers enter the market over time, its value should rise.
Many folks do not get Ethereum, nor smart contract platform blockchains. Folks donāt get stablecoins either, nor the fact that they rely on other blockchains, and involve paying fees in ETH or SOL or a dozen other blockchain coins. For the ā5%ersā ā those who will eventually spend 5% of their investing energy and resources on crypto ā this feels like the next key intuition unlock.
There is no better way to get there than to put a few ālearning dollarsā (i.e., not āinvestment dollarsā) on-chain and move them around. I hope my friends take their new USDC and throw some on AAVE, bridge some to Solana, and buy something on Uniswap.
This primary research might solidify an investorās conviction in a single platform. Or, just the opposite: it may solidify conviction that picking winners is hard in what is likely to be a year of explosive growth. XRP, XLM, and HBAR sat atop the 2024 leaderboard of the CoinDesk 20 Index, an outcome few would have predicted. We feel ā actually, we are expecting ā that investors and advisors will choose diversified market beta over the possibility of selection alpha.
The holders of the plastic-wallet bitcoin did not ātake the baitā and become active bitcoin enthusiasts (presumably), although, ex post, they did the right thing by throwing the wallet in a drawer for 10 years (along with a Post-itĀ® with the passphrase; whew!). These days, Iām trying to take as many opportunities as possible to get folks to fire up a wallet and get some blockchain experience. (But if not, Iāll still be good for the theater tickets with fiat.)
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