To commemorate the announcement, Coinbase released a new non-fungible token collection of, unsurprisingly, blue dots. The NFTs are free to mint, or download into a crypto wallet, and will be available through Sunday.

Last step! Use a Tombow MONO Drawing Pen to write a number on each of the interior panels (try to have an equal amount of evens and odds). Finally, flip up the interior panels and write your fortunes!


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The packet of leaves at the rim of the cup is interpreted as "letters," but in modern times, they could also be called text messages or emails. Journeys are shown in the form of "paths," "roadways" or "sea voyages," depending on other nearby signs. For example, the row of dots or dashes that symbolizes a journey, if seen with a tree or a flower, is a path if it is narrow and a roadway if it is broad, while a similar line of dots or dashes, if seen with a ship or a fish, is a river voyage if narrow and a sea voyage if it is broad. Here we have an anchor, which indicates a journey by water, and the line is long, indicating a journey abroad.

The anchor at the bottom of the cup tells of safety if one is a sailor, as many British men were during the era of these cards. However, if the sitter were female, one would be more likely to say, "Someone you know is a sailor and he will be perfectly safe at sea." The large scattering of jumbled little dots trailing ahed, behind, and around the anchor are called "the thick" or "the thicket" and indicate obstructions, gossip, and jealousy.-

A rectangle is a letter. A square can be an important letter or a package; three dots in a row is the "wish sign" that indicates your wish will come true. As before the anchor at the bottom indicates safety at sea, which held particular importance during the era of the British Empire, when many men served as sailors or in the military, or worked on bureaucratic or engineering projects in the colonies, which they could only reach by sea.

As in the cup above, a large square or rectangle represents an important letter or a package, perhaps one bearing a seal or requiring to be signed for upon receipt. The single dot is a coin rather than a "wish," to my way of thinking, because the "wish sign" consists of three dots in a straight row. However, if one's wish is for money, this will serve. The "important position" to be gained is again signified by an anchor, the sign of the far reaching British Empire and its need for professionals with both military and civilian training to fill essential roles abroad. This cup, incidentally, is th e one that is used on the paper envelop that originally encased the set.

The anchor near the rim, coming toward "home" means safety and protection in the near future. The letter or rectangle further down the side of the cup and closer to home indicates news on the way, and it may not be pleasant, but i see no sign of a "rival" here, only some coins and a very small wish-sign of three evenly spaced dots.

A mountain symbolizes great ambition that is fulfilled though the aid of a powerful friend or ally who holds a high social position. The wish-sign or three dots in a line signify that this friend will be inclined to grant your wish. The anchor at the rim toward the handle or "home" grants safety in the home; it can be said to indicate a happy marriage, but it can just as easily represent a happy and secure single life with minimal travel away from the home-place. A jumbled scattering of indistinguishable dots and spots is called "the thick" or "the thicket," and when it is at the bottom, it is said to be "in the water" or "drowning." The thick is a place of obstacles and the water is a place of danger, so we see here a mass of people of unpleasant character, perhaps gossips, but, as can be easily seen, the sitter's great friend, the mountain, and the anchor of safety near home rise above it all, so there is no need to worry about what is going on below.

A cat, being territorial, foretells jealousy, rivalry, or gossip. Here is it sitting on on its own piece of ground, and is nearing the handle or "home" territory that should be yours. A small rectangle is a letter and it is on its way, coming along the roadway of lines, toward "home" as well. It signifies an uplift in spirit or a promotion on the job because the roadway is rising upward and the letter drops small dots or coins downward.

The dog is coming from abroad because he is running along a roadway that descends from the "away" portion of the rim toward the "home" or handle of the cup. The three dots are the "wish sign" and although they do not represent a marriage per se, they do represent the fulfillment of a desire. The author of these cards assumes that the sitter is a young person hoping for a marriage, but the symbols could just as convincingly be read to say that an old friend is returning home from overseas and will fulfill some desire or wish of the sitter that is not marital in nature. The Wavy Lines are interpreted as "a great and happy change in your fortune," which is rather more optimistic than their customary meaning of "uncertainty."

Another interesting fact is that the pattern starts just after the genesis block, in block 1. Here is an image containing the first 15 blocks. The dots are labeled (x,y), where x is the block number and y is the extraNonce value. It seems that block 12 is the first mined by another user.

hello there, wondered if you would be able to show me a video of how you folded these. I can't seem to get it right ? thank you so much as i think these fortune cookies are so darn cute and i really want to make them.

David Ralph [42:48] 

 Perfect. So Brad, thank you so much for spending time with us today. Join me up those dots. And please come back again when you got more dots to join up. Because I do believe that by joining up the dots and connecting our past and the best way to build our futures. Mr. Brad Yates, thank you so much.

Prerna has written about the colourful apple farms of Himachal, India\u2019s startup ecosystem and a lot of things in between. She covers auto and business of entertainment. She has worked with Hindustan Times and Scroll.in, and also contributed features for Dawn, Huffington Post India, Mail Today, Firstpost and India Legal. ","id":457010,"avatar-s3-key":"fortuneindia\/2018-08\/08fccb91-6b27-4a28-bd90-7ca38440a387\/Prerna_IMG_3334_copy.jpg","twitter-handle":"@PLidhoo"}]},"dfc2dc94-1eca-4667-b80b-da5004335c22":{"author-name":"Ashish Gupta","headline":"Reimagining agriculture ","story-content-id":"dfc2dc94-1eca-4667-b80b-da5004335c22","slug":"macro\/reimagining-agriculture\/101991","sections":[{"domain-slug":null,"slug":"macro","name":"Macro","section-url":"https:\/\/www.fortuneindia.com\/macro","id":3126,"parent-id":null,"display-name":"Macro","collection":{"slug":"macro","name":"Macro","id":7857},"data":null}],"hero-image-metadata":{"width":1443,"height":943,"mime-type":"image\/jpeg","focus-point":[673,475]},"hero-image-s3-key":"fortuneindia\/2018-06\/e64793a5-a45e-4933-b6c5-370225f3e32c\/Agreeculture.jpg","url":"https:\/\/www.fortuneindia.com\/macro\/reimagining-agriculture\/101991","content-updated-at":1528871439061,"author-id":285056,"first-published-at":1528794252442,"authors":[{"slug":"ashish-gupta","social":[],"name":"Ashish Gupta","contributor-role":null,"avatar-url":"https:\/\/media.assettype.com\/fortuneindia\/2018-09\/2464d1f4-6e88-405d-9d2c-d577070b0783\/Ashish_Gupta__1_.jpg","bio":null,"id":285056,"avatar-s3-key":"fortuneindia\/2018-09\/2464d1f4-6e88-405d-9d2c-d577070b0783\/Ashish_Gupta__1_.jpg","twitter-handle":null}]}},"last-published-at":1540797590357,"subheadline":"Sikkim has just won a major United Nations award as a global organic food-only destination. But that is just the tip of a silent innovation revolution in Indian agriculture.","alternative":{"home":{"default":{"headline":"Joining the dots in the Indian farm sector"}}},"sections":[{"domain-slug":null,"slug":"polemicist","name":"Polemicist","section-url":"https:\/\/www.fortuneindia.com\/polemicist","id":5126,"parent-id":null,"display-name":"Polemicist","collection":{"slug":"polemicist","name":"Polemicist","id":11232},"data":null}],"read-time":3,"access-level-value":null,"content-created-at":1540644736789,"owner-name":"Rozelle Laha","custom-slug":null,"push-notification":null,"publisher-id":90,"hero-image-metadata":{"width":4363,"height":2909,"mime-type":"image\/jpeg"},"comments":null,"word-count":751,"entities":[],"published-at":1540797590357,"is-live-blog":false,"breaking-news-linked-story-id":null,"storyline-title":null,"summary":"Are India\u2019s farmlands booming or distressed? And what really is the breakthrough opportunity there?","external-id":null,"canonical-url":"https:\/\/www.fortuneindia.com\/polemicist\/how-to-join-the-dots-of-growth-in-indian-agriculture\/102629","is-amp-supported":true,"autotags":[],"linked-entities":[],"status":"published","hero-image-attribution":"Pexels","bullet-type":"123","id":"5eed8fcf-caec-45c7-b464-64e9ff40c068","hero-image-s3-key":"fortuneindia\/2018-10\/0d3e3e9d-8332-4138-bb11-956bdb3e5b51\/agriculture_cereal_clouds_175389.jpg","associated-series-collection-ids":[],"cards":[{"story-elements":[{"description":"","amp-html":"So, are India's farmlands booming or distressed? And what really is the breakthrough opportunity there?This question is almost always buried in endless polemic about the agriculture in India with its age-old imagery of eternal poverty coupled with the tragedy of farmer suicides. There is no doubt that parts of Indian agriculture are still mired in tremendous challenges and farmer suicides remain one of the foremost humanitarian crises that face the modern Indian state.But it would be unfair to suggest that this is the only picture of Indian agriculture which is in the process of a slow, almost silent but vigorous transformation. This is not just about tractor sales which ended the last fiscal year with a growth of 22% on the back of a good monsoon and strong rural demand. An expanding road network has boosted tractor sales in remote parts of Jharkhand, Telangana, Haryana and other states, and the tapering of the demonetisation effect has led to swifter consumption. The Bloomberg Indian rural economy indices show a steady climb in rural output growth. Two-wheeler sales, another good marker, have jumped in recent months.Naysayers point out that despite such good news, wage growth for both agricultural and non-agricultural labourers is negligible. And while there have been government loan waivers, the debt crisis, especially for farmers with land holdings of about an acre or less, continues.In all this what is lost is the silent story of innovation in Indian agriculture. With one of the biggest agrarian economies in the world, India has more arable land than even China, but the Chinese beat Indian agriculture in productivity by a wide margin. This comparison might not change anytime soon but there are undisputed signs that Indian farmlands are upping their game.","page-url":"\/story\/5eed8fcf-caec-45c7-b464-64e9ff40c068\/element\/274b71f1-48d1-466b-b938-ff469112c7be","type":"text","family-id":"737658ab-655e-400f-9542-d3413ef8de4b","title":"","id":"274b71f1-48d1-466b-b938-ff469112c7be","metadata":[],"subtype":null,"text":"So, are India's farmlands booming or distressed? And what really is the breakthrough opportunity there?This question is almost always buried in endless polemic about the agriculture in India with its age-old imagery of eternal poverty coupled with the tragedy of farmer suicides. There is no doubt that parts of Indian agriculture are still mired in tremendous challenges and farmer suicides remain one of the foremost humanitarian crises that face the modern Indian state.But it would be unfair to suggest that this is the only picture of Indian agriculture which is in the process of a slow, almost silent but vigorous transformation. This is not just about tractor sales which ended the last fiscal year with a growth of 22% on the back of a good monsoon and strong rural demand. An expanding road network has boosted tractor sales in remote parts of Jharkhand, Telangana, Haryana and other states, and the tapering of the demonetisation effect has led to swifter consumption. The Bloomberg Indian rural economy indices show a steady climb in rural output growth. Two-wheeler sales, another good marker, have jumped in recent months.Naysayers point out that despite such good news, wage growth for both agricultural and non-agricultural labourers is negligible. And while there have been government loan waivers, the debt crisis, especially for farmers with land holdings of about an acre or less, continues.In all this what is lost is the silent story of innovation in Indian agriculture. With one of the biggest agrarian economies in the world, India has more arable land than even China, but the Chinese beat Indian agriculture in productivity by a wide margin. This comparison might not change anytime soon but there are undisputed signs that Indian farmlands are upping their game."},{"description":"","amp-html":"Also Read: Reimagining agriculture ","page-url":"\/story\/5eed8fcf-caec-45c7-b464-64e9ff40c068\/element\/fe709dee-2665-4966-922e-e8ac770be155","type":"text","family-id":"c5a8ef67-a07a-45ca-8123-55bf69449a45","title":"","id":"fe709dee-2665-4966-922e-e8ac770be155","metadata":{"linked-story":{"headline":"Reimagining agriculture ","story-content-id":"dfc2dc94-1eca-4667-b80b-da5004335c22","id":"dfc2dc94-1eca-4667-b80b-da5004335c22","highlighted-headline":null},"linked-story-id":"dfc2dc94-1eca-4667-b80b-da5004335c22"},"subtype":"also-read","text":"Reimagining agriculture "},{"description":"","amp-html":"Take organic agriculture, for instance. India has around 30% of the world\u2019s organic farmers \u2013 the highest in the world. This has happened in a serendipitous way.Several Indian farmers did not have the money to buy expensive chemical fertilisers for a long time and then the impact of men like Subhash Palekar at home and winds of change bringing news that customers were willing to pay exponentially higher prices for organic food has created strong enthusiasm for organic agriculture. Palekar, a farmer in Maharashtra, who preaches \u2018zero budget spiritual farming\u2019, or farming using only natural and low-cost fertilisers and techniques, became the first farmer ever to win a Padma Shri, one of India\u2019s highest civilian awards, in 2016. His work has had an impact on around 400,000 farmers in Maharashtra and adjoining states. He told me that \u201cno farmer who uses zero budget spiritual farming commits suicide\u201d. While this has not been statistically verified, there is no denying his impact or the growing enthusiasm for both organic and traditional food in India.Top Indian restaurants and chefs now promote black rice and brown rice (and many other kinds and colours of rice and other grains like amaranth, buckwheat and many kinds of millets) grown in India which means the business of Fortune 40 under 40 companies like Original Indian Table has soared as more and more queue up for a taste of the hinterlands. India once used to have more than 100,000 varieties of rice grown in the country and while many fell to disuse, several are being brought back, packaged for a new, well-paying customer.","page-url":"\/story\/5eed8fcf-caec-45c7-b464-64e9ff40c068\/element\/090cec97-43d1-4901-9820-1c6f1e3e0cf6","type":"text","family-id":"e116518a-0968-49e5-bc7d-244dee7eee23","title":"","id":"090cec97-43d1-4901-9820-1c6f1e3e0cf6","metadata":[],"subtype":null,"text":"Take organic agriculture, for instance. India has around 30% of the world\u2019s organic farmers \u2013 the highest in the world. This has happened in a serendipitous way.Several Indian farmers did not have the money to buy expensive chemical fertilisers for a long time and then the impact of men like Subhash Palekar at home and winds of change bringing news that customers were willing to pay exponentially higher prices for organic food has created strong enthusiasm for organic agriculture. Palekar, a farmer in Maharashtra, who preaches \u2018zero budget spiritual farming\u2019, or farming using only natural and low-cost fertilisers and techniques, became the first farmer ever to win a Padma Shri, one of India\u2019s highest civilian awards, in 2016. His work has had an impact on around 400,000 farmers in Maharashtra and adjoining states. He told me that \u201cno farmer who uses zero budget spiritual farming commits suicide\u201d. While this has not been statistically verified, there is no denying his impact or the growing enthusiasm for both organic and traditional food in India.Top Indian restaurants and chefs now promote black rice and brown rice (and many other kinds and colours of rice and other grains like amaranth, buckwheat and many kinds of millets) grown in India which means the business of Fortune 40 under 40 companies like Original Indian Table has soared as more and more queue up for a taste of the hinterlands. India once used to have more than 100,000 varieties of rice grown in the country and while many fell to disuse, several are being brought back, packaged for a new, well-paying customer."},{"description":"","amp-html":"Also Read: Big boost to agriculture","page-url":"\/story\/5eed8fcf-caec-45c7-b464-64e9ff40c068\/element\/509baa71-a7ce-48dc-bfdc-0b96b65b58e7","type":"text","family-id":"d362f0cc-a535-4c18-a428-f9fe7d6117e2","title":"","id":"509baa71-a7ce-48dc-bfdc-0b96b65b58e7","metadata":{"linked-story":{"headline":"Big boost to agriculture","story-content-id":"fcca7887-2bf9-4559-bbd3-b9e68b598147","id":"fcca7887-2bf9-4559-bbd3-b9e68b598147","highlighted-headline":null},"linked-story-id":"fcca7887-2bf9-4559-bbd3-b9e68b598147"},"subtype":"also-read","text":"Big boost to agriculture"},{"description":"","amp-html":"Sikkim just beat entries from more than 50 countries, including agricultural innovation hubs like Denmark, to win a major United Nations awards for its status as an organic food-only destination. Note the connection between a better kind of agriculture and other social benefits\u2014a healthier, more socially conscious, more prosperous population in Sikkim has also meant that the state was among the first to become open defecation free and ban plastic use.One of the top milk producing countries in the world, India has a bona fide innovation hit in the success of Milk Mantra, the multimillion dollar diary startup, which has brought Odisha onto the map of startup hubs.In fact, so large is now the number of Indian agri-tech startups that they have their own expo pushing everything from new pumping techniques, to soil testing and management systems, and raw food supply chain breakthroughs.Why don\u2019t we hear more about the innovation in Indian agriculture though? It is because no one thinks of innovation, start-ups and agriculture in the same breath. It is a problem of language, of idioms\u2014but thankfully that is starting to change.","page-url":"\/story\/5eed8fcf-caec-45c7-b464-64e9ff40c068\/element\/32f27acd-12ec-4035-97c3-502790588c10","type":"text","family-id":"272aa8a9-4896-41db-bbd6-2e60d22e4598","title":"","id":"32f27acd-12ec-4035-97c3-502790588c10","metadata":[],"subtype":null,"text":"Sikkim just beat entries from more than 50 countries, including agricultural innovation hubs like Denmark, to win a major United Nations awards for its status as an organic food-only destination. Note the connection between a better kind of agriculture and other social benefits\u2014a healthier, more socially conscious, more prosperous population in Sikkim has also meant that the state was among the first to become open defecation free and ban plastic use.One of the top milk producing countries in the world, India has a bona fide innovation hit in the success of Milk Mantra, the multimillion dollar diary startup, which has brought Odisha onto the map of startup hubs.In fact, so large is now the number of Indian agri-tech startups that they have their own expo pushing everything from new pumping techniques, to soil testing and management systems, and raw food supply chain breakthroughs.Why don\u2019t we hear more about the innovation in Indian agriculture though? It is because no one thinks of innovation, start-ups and agriculture in the same breath. It is a problem of language, of idioms\u2014but thankfully that is starting to change."},{"id":"00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000","description":"","title":"","subtype":null,"type":"text","text":" Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube & Instagram to never miss an update from Fortune India. To buy a copy, visit Amazon.","metadata":{"promotional-message":true},"amp-html":" Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube & Instagram to never miss an update from Fortune India. To buy a copy, visit Amazon."}],"card-updated-at":1540644923883,"content-version-id":"2d9088b3-9d87-4a0c-948d-287e6981202a","card-added-at":1540644736802,"status":"draft","id":"50605c53-93e4-4889-9859-e192a4ee9324","content-id":"50605c53-93e4-4889-9859-e192a4ee9324","card-updated-at-human-readable":"October 27, 2018 at 6:25 PM","version":3,"metadata":{"social-share":{"shareable":true,"title":"How to join the dots of growth in Indian agriculture","message":"Are India\u2019s farmlands booming or distressed? And what really is the breakthrough opportunity there?","image":{"key":"fortuneindia\/2018-10\/0d3e3e9d-8332-4138-bb11-956bdb3e5b51\/agriculture_cereal_clouds_175389.jpg","url":null,"attribution":"Pexels","caption":null,"metadata":{"width":4363,"height":2909,"mime-type":"image\/jpeg"}}}}}],"url":"https:\/\/www.fortuneindia.com\/polemicist\/how-to-join-the-dots-of-growth-in-indian-agriculture\/102629","story-version-id":"c3ee6c35-f83f-4a5b-8db4-d84305deb357","content-type":"story","content-updated-at":1540797590478,"author-id":285065,"owner-id":552193,"hero-image-amp-html":"","linked-story-ids":["dfc2dc94-1eca-4667-b80b-da5004335c22","fcca7887-2bf9-4559-bbd3-b9e68b598147"],"access":null,"promotional-message":" Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube & Instagram to never miss an update from Fortune India. To buy a copy, visit Amazon.","first-published-at":1540645001318,"hero-image-caption":null,"redirect":false,"version":5,"story-template":null,"sequence-no":102629,"created-at":1540797563983,"authors":[{"slug":"hindol-sengupta","social":{"twitter":{"handle":"@hindolsengupta"}},"name":"Hindol Sengupta","contributor-role":null,"avatar-url":"https:\/\/media.assettype.com\/fortuneindia\/2018-09\/91b5f19f-b9da-40b3-b887-cab300966a5b\/hindol.png","bio":"He is an award-winning writer of nine best-selling books. He has won the Wilbur Award, and the PSF Prize for public service in India. Sengupta is a World Economic Forum Young Global leader and a Knight-Bagehot Fellow.

","id":285065,"avatar-s3-key":"fortuneindia\/2018-09\/91b5f19f-b9da-40b3-b887-cab300966a5b\/hindol.png","twitter-handle":"@hindolsengupta"}],"metadata":{"card-share":{"shareable":true}},"publish-at":null,"assignee-name":"Rozelle Laha"}) + " min read"); }); Image: Pexels So, are India's farmlands booming or distressed? And what really is the breakthrough opportunity there? 006ab0faaa

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