A Facebook post from Michael Pierono Miller.
The leading lady.

#dc#dc comics#batman#bruce wayne#dc universe#dick grayson#tim drake#dc fanart#batfamily#batfam


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A Facebook post from Michael Pierono Miller.
The leading lady.
TIM DRAKE: ROBIN #3
Written by MEGHAN FITZMARTIN
Art by RILEY ROSSMO
Cover by MAX DUNBAR
Variant cover by DAN MORA
1:25 variant cover by DAVID TALASKI
1:50 variant cover by RIAN GONZALES
’90s Cover Month variant cover by TODD NAUCK
$3.99 US | 32 pages | Variant $4.99 US (card stock)
ON SALE 11/22/22
Did someone say goldfish? After a mysterious murder takes place in broad library, Tim, Detective Williams, and Darcy are led to three suspects…except they aren’t real? Meanwhile, Tim’s been so busy on this case, he’s forgotten the case of the boyfriend. Where’s Bernard?
The Draper family has played a defining role in Silicon Valley venture capital for four generations. On April 19, Bill Draper III, Tim Draper, and Jesse Draper took to the CHM Live stage to share their story and insights. Watch the show and learn more in our latest blog post "Venture Capital in the Blood: Three Generations of Drapers in Silicon Valley." Read "Venture Capital in the Blood" on @CHM or Medium (medium.com/@computerhistory).
The Akha migrated from China to Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam over the past 200 years. Some of their villages can be found today in the far north of Laos, primarily Phongsaly and Luang Namtha provinces. Traditionally living in more upland areas, some Akha communities can be very remote.
While they used to be also called the Ko or Iko, these names are now considered impolite. The Akha comprises many different sub-groups and clans, who have maintained very strong identities and lifestyles.
Though the Akha do not have a written script, men are able to recite their genealogy going back over 60 generations. This has helped to maintain the Akha identity and history that links clans and families.
Akha villages can be easily recognized by their gates and large swings. The gate is considered a marker between the human and spirit worlds. It is believed to protect the village from outlaws, wild animals and disease. Visitors should never touch it. The village swing is used during the harvest festival in August or September, a time of fun and celebration.
Akha women are famous for their silver headdresses that come in different shapes and designs, depending on the Akha group, and can be very expensive. The Akha Djepia, for instance, wear a cone-shaped headdress, while the Akha Pouly headdress is more rounded, with a flat disc at the back. The Akha also wear indigo-dyed cotton clothing, decorated with embroidery, applique-work and beads.
Photographer: Tim Draper
Tim Draper Bitcoin Loss: Venture Capitalist’s $2.57M Strategic Move Analyzed
BitcoinWorld Tim Draper Bitcoin Loss: Venture Capitalist’s $2.57M Strategic Move Analyzed Prominent venture capitalist Tim Draper has executed a significant Bitcoin transaction, moving over 150 BTC to a centralized exchange at an estimated multi-million dollar loss, according to ...
➤ Venture capitalist Tim Draper moved 150.84 BTC to Coinbase, likely realizing a $2.57 million loss. ➤ The transaction, from a wallet dormant for a year, is analyzed for strategic reasons like portfolio rebalancing or capital raising. ➤ This event highlights the transparency of on-chain data in understanding high-profile investor behavior in crypto markets.
Resumen semanal de Bitcoin: compras récord de Strategy y movimientos masivos de Tether
Bitcoin gana impulso institucional con compras récord de Strategy, acumulación de Tether y proyecciones alcistas de Tim Draper.
➤ Strategy has made record Bitcoin purchases, with CEO Samson Mow suggesting their average purchase price may establish a new structural floor for Bitcoin. ➤ Tether continues its accumulation strategy, moving over $70 million in Bitcoin to its reserve wallet and increasing its total holdings to over 97,000 BTC. ➤ Investor Tim Draper remains bullish, projecting Bitcoin to reach $250,000 within 18 months, citing persistent inflation and a weakening dollar.
Tim Draper: Capitalist de Risc Pionier în Investițiile Crypto și Blockchain
Tim Draper este una dintre cele mai influente figuri din lumea investițiilor în tehnologiile emergente, recunoscut pentru abordarea sa vizionară și pentru portofoliul impresionant de investiții în companii crypto și proiecte blockchain. Prin strategii inovatoare și un spirit antreprenorial, Draper a contribuit la transformarea ecosistemului digital, oferind capital și încredere unor proiecte ce…
WHY RUSSIA'S HIGH TECH IS CALIFORNIA DREAMING
Opinion | I recently attended the annual Global Technology Symposium.
"This article from Moscow Times (April 2011) is so prescient. The focus is Tim Draper. I haven’t seen something spell out so clearly how techno-libertarians operate above nation states. Sounds like a good idea… until it’s not." Keri Kukral
"I recently attended the annual Global Technology Symposium. Although held in Menlo Park, California, the worldwide hub of venture capital companies, and organized by Silicon Valley insiders, it had a strong Russian component. Russian Venture Company, the government-run fund, was a key backer, while Rusnano and the Skolkovo project were sponsors. Russians were prominent among attendees, and a Russia Day opened the event.
In a small way, it was a rerun of last year’s visit by a California high-tech delegation to Moscow. Even though neither then-Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger nor President Dmitry Medvedev was present this time, there were numerous Russian government employees and prominent U.S. venture capitalists, including legendary Silicon Valley investors Bill Draper and Pitch Johnson.
Russian officials talked about the important role government can play in shaping the entrepreneurial culture in Russia, but they admitted that private money was needed to make innovation a success. They emphasized the importance of early stage investment in technology startups by experienced private investors, mentoring entrepreneurs and giving them professional advice. The sooner the government gets out of the venture capital business — and private capital gets in — the better it would be for the Russian high-tech industry. Rusnano and Skolkovo even announced that they had opened an office on in Menlo Park to attract U.S. venture capital.
They said all the right things and sounded quite proud of themselves for learning their lines. But all they talked about was promoting Russian innovations and high tech. U.S. investors, meanwhile, never once said the word “American.” They talked about the private sector and Silicon Valley, not strictly U.S. entrepreneurs, industry or innovation. They praised Russia’s scientific establishment and education system, but they mentioned India, China and Israel in the same breath. A technology company used as a case study at the symposium was started by scientists in Cambridge, England. It now has a factory in Germany and plans to build another one in Russia, using Rusnano investment.
The high-tech industry began in California, but it has transcended U.S. borders. It relies on ideas, entrepreneurial skills, managerial talent and capital without regard for its origins. Research and manufacturing follow the logic of business decisions, not national interests. The best thing Russia can do to promote innovation is to abandon its misplaced national ambitions and integrate into the world economy promptly and seamlessly. It needs to improve its legal protections for investors and entrepreneurs and restrain its bureaucrats and siloviki raiders. Recent initiatives by Medvedev to separate state-owned companies from the government by barring top-level bureaucrats from serving on their boards of directors is a step in the right direction, but many more will need to follow.
As for entrepreneurs, there are plenty of them in Russia, and they need no government involvement. Once there is a healthy business climate, private money from around the world will rush in to back their projects. Until that happens, however, they will want to leave Russia and join many of their countrymen already living and working in California. For them, the most inspiring words at the symposium were probably uttered by Tim Draper, founder of venture capital firm Draper Fisher Jurvetson and a third-generation high-tech investor. He started his remarks by rattling off a list of a half-dozen successful high-tech firms in the United States and asking what they had in common.
“They all had founders born outside the United States,” he said."
Alexei Bayer, a native Muscovite, is a New York-based economist.