What kind of pay rate are we looking at for brownies? I believe BM was using about 100 brownies per hour of work... at current market rates that is about 500bts/hour or 2.25$/hour.
I know that there is not a lot of money to go around, but one would be better off working at McDonalds for minimum wage and just buying brownies. They would end up with 3-4 times as many brownies for the same amount of time worked.
Well that is only if you think brownies will never get sharedropped on by really amazing projects. I assure you I plan on advocating brownies and bts be sharedropped on by many projects in the future. But that is only effective if I get community backing because it isn't me---it is you---who give me the power to make my advocacy effective.
By working for such a low rate of pay, you are identifying yourself as a very very special (and hard to find) demographic for project leaders....
I do not ask you to work for them if you do not want to jay, it is completely up to you. But if you believe I am a person of my word and feel it is important to help me accomplish many future sharedrops...then you might find that working for brownies ends up paying you far more. Maybe not...it really is up to you.
Regardless, I cannot
promise you anything other than my intentions to help for as long as I can advocate for the brownie bakers. It is up to you to make that decision. Trust me, I don't judge on this---if I (and the other team members) had put the amount of hours into working at even mcdonalds, and never worked for bts (just sat by and watched from afar), I would be sitting on a very nice horde of bts by now...but then again, that bts would not be backed by a community who trusts the core devs so much. So in taking that path...I would have likely hurt my own "hodlings" as well as everyone else's. I'd also have to worry far more about the stability of a coin with far less community chops
Some already have made the decision to be part of this and I personally believe brownies will be very very valuable someday...especially if its holders represent a demographic it currently represents.