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The Future of Craft Beer: The Craft Beer Trend Predictor

This is going to sound crazy: I recently had a conversation with Satoshi Nakamoto.  Yes, the same Satoshi Nakamoto often credited with creating the cryptocurrency Bitcoin.  Now did I truly believe I was communicating with the real Nakamoto, or that such a “person” actually exists?  No, not really.  Why would I?  First of all, this was an online conversation, and on the World Wide Web where anonymity’s the norm, it’s never exactly clear with whom (or with what) you’re interacting.  It’s a world where you can give yourself whatever name you want, hide your location by bouncing your IP address off an array of thousands of servers, and maybe even erase any trace that you were ever there at all.  There are few better examples of this than Satoshi Nakamoto, a.k.a the Ghost of Bitcoin.

Somewhat of an online urban legend, Nakamoto is about as elusive as they come.  Appearing out of nowhere in 2008 with a groundbreaking, self-published Bitcoin blueprint, Nakamoto then went on to release the first Bitcoin software to the world for free in 2009, only to disappear shortly afterwards.   In fact, nobody’s entirely sure whether Nakamoto is a person, pseudonym, group of people, some sort of über -genius, or perhaps an acronymous multinational conglomerate with less than clear intentions.  And to say Nakamoto is a bit of a recluse is something of an understatement.  The guy/entity only just recently popped out of the woodwork for the first time in five years after an article was run in Newsweek alleging to have confirmed Nakamoto’s true identity.  Later that day, the “real” Nakamoto emerged from his P2P Foundation account to respond:  Go fish.

So what does all of this have to do with beer?  I was just getting to that.

Enter The Craft Beer Trend Predictor

Craft Beer Trend Predictor

As I’m undoubtedly sure is the case with a lot of craft beer fans, I could be having a conversation about, oh I don’t know, let’s say cryptocurrency, and somehow I find myself making some connection to and remarking about (you guessed it) beer.  As fate would have it, I was engaged in just such a conversation online with none other than Satoshi Nakamoto, or at least that was his handle, and as predicted, craft beer came up.  “Nakamoto” mentioned he was a fellow craft beer fan, and not only that, he was into homebrewing too.   Alright, I know what you’re thinking: ‘This is too good to be true.’  And you’re right.  It was.  Sort of.  Nakamoto, apparent master of wordplay, joked that he was into homebrewing video games, a term used to describe programming your own video games to run on proprietary gaming systems like PlayStation or Xbox.  Sigh.  The guy invented Bitcoin, so I let it slide.

All kidding aside, he said he was working on a program that utilizes powerful predictive computing algorithms to anticipate future trends, similar to how google seems to know what you’re going to type before you finish typing it.  Nakamoto’s version is like the “Google Instant” search predictor, but on steroids.  And instead of just predicting search results, it predicts EVERYTHING.   Climate change, geopolitics, decryption, the stock market, you name it.

Satoshi Nakamoto: Think of it as a kind of digital crystal ball, only much more bloody accurate.

Needless to say, Nakamoto didn’t give much detail on how the program works, just that he was appropriating a few super computers (the TH-2, Cray Titan, etc.), technology from D-Wave, some large databases (NERSC, Google, NCDC, MAINWAY, Facebook, the CIA), and data “borrowed” from the LHC.

Satoshi Nakamoto: It’s not complete, but close.

Being the natural skeptic I am, I said prove it.

Satoshi Nakamoto:  You said you like craft beer, correct?

I concurred.

Satoshi Nakamoto:  Well then here’s a small proof-of-concept.

Nakamoto uploaded an executable file, which I promptly grabbed.

Satoshi Nakamoto:  Cheers.

And with that, Nakamoto disappeared along with the chat log.  As such, the above dialog and other details were reconstructed from memory, with the exception of the file.

Now I’m not usually in the habit of accepting executable files from strangers, but this was just too tempting.  So I ran the program.

Remember how I said Nakamoto’s software for predicting future trends is supposed to apply to everything?  In yet another display of the King of Bitcoin’s wit, he left me with a small taster-sized version of his program, which I share with you now.  To be honest though, I’d hoped that he would have given me the version that predicts the future of the stock market, but far be it from me to look a gift program in the code.

From the creator of Bitcoin (and now Bitbeer?), I present to you:

The Craft Beer Trend Predictor

[Click Responsibly.]

Kanpai (エイプリルフール)!


Like this blarticle? Well, thanks- you’re far too kind.  Want to read more beer inspired thoughts?  Come back any time, subscribe to our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/beersyndicate.



Or feel free to drop me a line at: dan@beersyndicate.com

Hi, I’m Dan: Beer Editor for Beer Syndicate, Beer and Drinking Blogger, Gold Medal-Winning Homebrewer, Beer Reviewer, AHA Member, Beer Judge, Shameless Beer Promoter, and Beer Traveler.  Interests? Beer.

Daniel J. Leonard

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Beer Health, Vol. 1- Beer, Blood and Women

“Hey ladies!”

-Beastie Boys

We all know that drinking beer makes you a better person, but did you also know that beer can make you live forever?  Well, it probably can’t [research pending], but it turns out beer may be healthier for you than you thought.  (See, you were right about drinking all these years.)

As if you needed even more reasons to drink beer, this series of articles about beer and health takes a look at some of the science behind why a beer a day really can keep the doctor away.  And to kick things off, we’ll be digging into what may have been the first woman-centric study that focused on providing evidence for whether beer, wine or liquor is most beneficial to women.

(Hmmm, I wonder which alcoholic beverage will come out on top…)

In 2002, Harvard (the school) released a beverage-specific study that compared the effects of beer, wine and liquor with respect to blood pressure in women.  The results of this study of nearly 71,000 women showed that the consumption of beer (more so than wine or liquor) helped reduce the risk of hypertension, a.k.a. high blood pressure.

“We did find that light-beer drinking [1 drink or less per day on average] was protective against chronic hypertension. Cross-sectional data from Japan also suggest a protective blood pressure effect among exclusive beer drinking compared with drinking other beverages.”

That’s right, when it comes to blood health, beer beat out wine and hard liquor, and now there’s the science to prove it.  In fairness though, having at least some ethyl-alcoholic beverage on a daily basis (beer, wine or the old hoocharino) was shown to reduce the risk of hypertension more so than with those who didn’t drink at all.

“Among women who consumed on average 0.26 to 0.50 drink per day, the risk of developing hypertension was lower by 14% compared with nondrinkers.”

Take that, teetotalers!

Ok, there is one caveat: the risk of high blood pressure among women tended to increase with over 1 drink on average per day, no matter the type of alcoholic beverage.  The workaround?  Simple: Rollover drinks.  

Didn’t have a drink on Monday?  Just roll that thang over to Tuesday.  No drink on Tuesday?  You’re slackin’, but not to worry, humpday equals triple-fisting day. 

I’m sorta half-joking, but the Harvard study actually did look at “episodic drinking” as well, and found that women who consumed “at least 12 drinks over 1 to 3 days… were not at increased risk of chronic hypertension.”  However, risk “was increased among women who drank more than 1.5 drinks per day for at least 5 days per week”.  Translation: the occasional binge doesn’t appear to rocket your blood pressure; it’s the consistent excess that’ll get ya.

So why all the fuss about blood pressure?  Well, according to WebMD— the most authoritative source for medical information outside of Wikipedia— high blood pressure can lead to stroke and heart dis-ease, and turns out that stress is a major cause of hypertension.

That’s where booze comes in.

Alcohol (ethanol) is a relaxant.  A mood lightener.  A worry reducer.  And it appears that beer has even greater hypertension preventing powers than that of wine or liquor.  So the take away seems to be that it’s OK to have a drink (better yet, research suggests that it’s actually healthy for you), but know your healthy limits, which for the ladies appears to be an average of one a day.

Oh yeah- and the other take away? Beer wins. Again.

P.S. Almost forgot about my imbibing brothers.  Well fellas, your healthy drinking target seems to be around two per day.  Sorry- didn’t do much research on that, but let’s just roll with it.

Sláinte! (To your health)


Like this blarticle? Well, thanks- you’re far too kind.  Want to read more beer inspired thoughts?  Come back any time, subscribe to our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/beersyndicate.


Or feel free to drop me a line at: dan@beersyndicate.com

Hi, I’m Dan: Beer Editor for Beer Syndicate, Beer and Drinking Blogger, Gold Medal-Winning Homebrewer, Beer Reviewer, AHA Member, Beer Judge, Shameless Beer Promoter, and Beer Traveler.  Interests? Beer.

Daniel J. Leonard, Co-Founder of Beer Syndicate

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The Top 30ish Things Homebrewers Hate about Homebrewing

On the surface of it, the title “The Top 30ish Things Homebrewers Hate about Homebrewing” may sound somewhat divisively discouraging, especially to those beginning brewers or to the adventurous souls thinking about picking up the brew kettle and joining the ranks.  But don’t be put off.  Let me assure you, homebrewing is one of the most fulfillingly humanizing crafts in which one can engage, and the rewards of creating the greatest beverage in existence with your own two hands far outweigh the unavoidable toils of the brewer.

The impetus behind this oh-please-not-another-internetlist materialized out of a rant topic that was started under the homebrewing forum on the sometimes controversial social news website reddit, where fellow homebrewers were polled on the things that irked them the most about their hobby.  Despite the homebrewer’s general ‘pint is half-full’ disposition, within minutes, the conversation spiraled into an all-out gripefest of sorts, proving that not even homebrewers are immune to the cathartic zen-ness that can only be attained through a group bitch session.

Read more…



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