5:05 - Welcome with Brent Roose & Nils Adermann 11:40 - Kévin Dunglas - Franken PHP 46:55 - Nicolas Grekas - 20 Years of Symfony 1:21:33 - Marcel Pociot - MCP Servers with PHP 1:54:10 - Cheuk Thing Ho - How AI is changing the Tech industry 2:34:11 - Taylor Otwell - Laravel creator 3:33:30 - JeffreyWay & Povilas Korop & Kevin Bond 4:11:15 - Roman Pronskiy & Gina Peter Banyard
5:05 - Welcome with Brent Roose & Nils Adermann 11:40 - Kévin Dunglas - Franken PHP 46:55 - Nicolas Grekas - 20 Years of Symfony 1:21:33 - Marcel Pociot - MCP Servers with PHP 1:54:10 - Cheuk Thing Ho - How AI is changing the Tech industry 2:34:11 - Taylor Otwell - Laravel creator 3:33:30 - JeffreyWay & Povilas Korop & Kevin Bond 4:11:15 - Roman Pronskiy & Gina Peter Banyard
Most people buy Bitcoin via exchanges, such as Coinbase. Exchanges allow you to buy, sell and hold cryptocurrency, and setting up an account is similar to opening a brokerage account—you’ll need to verify your identity and provide some kind of funding source, such as a bank account or debit card. Major exchanges include Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini. You can also buy Bitcoin at a broker like Robinhood. Regardless of where you buy your Bitcoin, you’ll need a digital wallet in which to store it. This might be what’s called a hot wallet or a cold wallet. A hot wallet (also called an online wallet) is stored by an exchange or a provider in the cloud. Providers of online wallets include Exodus, Electrum and Mycelium. A cold wallet (or mobile wallet) is an offline device used to store Bitcoin and is not connected to the Internet. Some mobile wallet options include Trezor and Ledger.