A pioneering utility coin powering gas fees for the Peace Through Trade (PTT) L1 PoW Blockchain ecosystem. Follow our new account: x.com/PTT_Blockchain
The world is changing faster than anyone realizes.
What comes next will reshape global commerce and the flow of value across the world. 🌎
The Peace Through Trade L1 PoW blockchain is the infrastructure ready to power that shift today.
Watch this. 👇
Exciting day! We tested the new PTT Wallet app by sending PTT Coin to each other on our team meeting this morning. 📲
Nothing beats seeing it work in real-time. Found a few tweaks and improvements to make, which is exactly why we do these tests. More updates coming soon.
Most of the progress on poverty this century didn't come from donations, it came from people getting phones, accounts, markets, and a way to sell what they make.
Access did what charity couldn't. The next decade of that story is just starting.
Scientists found over 1,100 new ocean species in a single year, a record.
After Lyme Bay banned bottom trawling, sea life came roaring back within a few years. The planet is still full of things we haven't discovered
$1.4 trillion moved through mobile money in Africa last year. Not through banks. Through phones, often basic ones on 2G.
The infrastructure everyone said was missing got built anyway, just not the way anyone expected.
In 2011, 42% of people in lower-income countries had a financial account. By 2024 it was 75%.
That's hundreds of millions of people getting a way in for the first time, mostly through a phone, in barely over a decade. One of the biggest quiet wins of our lifetime and it's barely ever a headline.
Global growth is stuck around 2.6% this year, and for developing countries the slowdown means less money for the roads, ports, and power they need to climb.
The cruel math of it: the places that most need to build are the ones getting squeezed hardest right now.
The future is going to be built on enormous computing power. The only real question is what powers the computers.
Coal and gas, or the sun. We already made our choice, and we think the rest of the industry will have to make the same one whether it wants to or not.
Here's the tension nobody wants to sit with.
AI could help us monitor forests, track methane leaks, and map ocean currents we've never seen. It's also on track to consume more electricity than entire nations.
The tool can heal or harm. What decides it is how we power it and what we point it at.
SWIFT confirmed more than 25 banks will go live with blockchain-based payments by June 2026.
The same technology the headlines spent years calling a scam is now quietly becoming the plumbing of the banking system.
Everything you call normal was once impossible. Flight. Talking to someone across an ocean.
A country built on an idea instead of a bloodline. A financial system that serves everyone is just next on that list.
Aid has had sixty years and trillions of dollars in Africa alone.
Show me the country it permanently lifted out of poverty. The ones that got out, South Korea, China, Vietnam, did it by building things and selling them to the world.
Charity keeps people alive. Trade is what gets them out.
Every few months another country uses critical minerals as a bargaining chip in some trade fight. Cobalt, rare earths, lithium. The places those minerals come from are usually the poorest on earth and see almost none of the money. We dug the whole global economy out of their backyard and handed them a tip.
The thing crypto skeptics swore would never happen is happening quietly this year.
Real stocks, real Treasuries, real IPOs, all moving onto blockchain rails.
The argument is basically over.
Someone once said the future is already here, it's just not evenly distributed. That single sentence explains almost everything about the world right now. The work worth doing is the distribution part.
The thing crypto skeptics swore would never happen is happening quietly this year.
Real stocks, real Treasuries, real IPOs, all moving onto blockchain rails.
The argument is basically over.
We have the technology to solve problems that were unsolvable a decade ago. What we don't have yet is the will to get that technology to the places that need it most.
Every young technology goes through its dangerous adolescence, the era of hacks, scams, and hard lessons.
Cars had it. The early internet had it.
The mess is real, and it's also the phase right before the safety rails get built and the thing becomes something everyone can trust.