Crypto markets teach you something over time: data floods everywhere, but solid judgment? That's genuinely rare. You can chase a thousand pieces of information, but your real edge comes from knowing what to filter out. In Web3, learning how to evaluate matters way more than just consuming more. Quality discernment beats quantity every time.
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ZenChainWalker
· 01-08 02:08
I'm already over the issue of information overload. The ones who truly make money are never the ones who consume the most information; you have to learn to say "no."
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GasWhisperer
· 01-06 14:54
ngl the signal-to-noise ratio in this space is absolutely brutal... saw someone yesterday parsing 47 different on-chain metrics when they could've just watched the mempool for 5 mins and saved themselves a small fortune in gas. that's where the real edge hides imo
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ProofOfNothing
· 01-06 14:45
What’s the use of having a lot of information? The key is to have a brain to filter it. This saying is spot on—how many people scroll through 200 on-chain data points a day, only to end up as bagholders in the end.
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ColdWalletGuardian
· 01-06 14:42
Too much information can backfire, and in the end, it still depends on who can calm down and think clearly.
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LiquidityHunter
· 01-06 14:34
Still looking at the data at 3 AM, I found a crazy liquidity gap, but then I realized I've seen this trick too many times... All the information is useless, the key is that 0.3% filtering ability.
Crypto markets teach you something over time: data floods everywhere, but solid judgment? That's genuinely rare. You can chase a thousand pieces of information, but your real edge comes from knowing what to filter out. In Web3, learning how to evaluate matters way more than just consuming more. Quality discernment beats quantity every time.