After the wall fell in 1989, Estonia took a good hard look at the range of opportunities that opened up, and they decided to go all-in on technology.
Now the tiny nation of 1.4m people (IIRC) has electronic IDs, electronic voting, electronic legislation (so, ya know, the populace can actually READ legislation BEFORE it is voted on), and are now embracing blockchain technology in the issuance of their own ICO, or cryptocurrency.
For financial transactions, yes. But also to support their digital identity system. Contracts. Alternate startup funding. Their virtual citizenship initiative.
They see the power of the blockchain, and speak intelligently about it, and see that it has the potential to be a very effective technology for open governance.
Yet again, I want to move to Estonia. (The cost of living, startup scene, residency requirements, etc, all make it really attractive as well.)
If you are to move to Estonia, not speaking the country's language means not giving the respect to its culture that it deserves. You can get by as a tourist, but settling there — what I had in mind — requires more effort than speaking one sole language.
I have no doubt you would. When language is just a means of communication, there's no reason to bother with it.
<interrogative wonderment> + to kill + Russki. Help me out.
i wanted it to mean "does he intend to kill russians?", and unless a finn tells me i'm wrong, i assume that's what it does mean as soon as putin sniffs out the russian minority in estonia, that's what estonians will have to do
That's an interesting position to take with a language you barely know. Wh— Why?i wanted it to mean "does he intend to kill russians?", and unless a finn tells me i'm wrong, i assume that's what it does mean
that's what estonians will have to do