I'm Gabo.

    From finance to entrepreneurship

      My journey started in finance—I studied it in college and landed a job at Morgan Stanley right after graduation. But wait! Before that, I worked for a small food company in Chicago, selling Jamón and Chorizo. That’s when I had my first real entrepreneurial spark—I knew I wanted to build something of my own.

    Banking, Solar, and Carsharing.

      After some time at Morgan Stanley and Oquendo, a small M&A boutique, I found my first venture: Nexer Renovables, a solar energy company. It was a success by Spanish standards, and I loved the industry. However, it was too dependent on subsidies then, so I pivoted to a different sector with a similar impact—sustainable mobility. That’s when I launched Bluemove, one of Spain’s first car-sharing companies. In 2016, Europcar acquired Bluemove, and I helped shape the company's new mobility and technology division.

    Technology

      Bluemove required a fair amount of software and hardware. I was coming from spreadsheets and having to face HTML in Mailchimp->then CSS->Javascript->Terminal->Git->PHP->MYSQL->Python->Pandas->Numpy->ML->Bitcoin

      Thanks to my technical friends who taught me, websites like Codecademy, Teamtreehouse, universities like MIT or Stanford through Coursera, and edX.

    Interactive Web

      Now, I’m working on something more significant. I want to make a web where human consciousness exists, free from centralized servers. Everything started here: As We May Think

      And this is the best implementation I have seen of those fundamental ideas:

    Some crazy stuff from Ted

      Computer Lib, Dream Machines
      Computer Lib, Dream Machines

      BIBLIOGRAPHY

        Vannevar Bush, "As We May Think." Atlantic Monthly, July 1945, 101–108.

        Theodor H. Nelson, "As We Will Think." Proc. Online 72 Conference, Brunel U. Uxbridge, England.

        G. Salton, "Recent Studies in Automatic Text Analysis and Document Retrieval." JACM, Apr 73, 258–278.

        Donald E. Walker (ed.), Interactive Bibliographic Search: The User/Computer Interface. AFIPS Press, $15.

        Theodor H. Nelson, "Getting It Out of Our System." In Schechter (ed.), Critique of Information Retrieval (Thompson Books, 1967).

        J.C.R. Licklider, Libraries of the Future, MIT Press, 1965.
        Clear and readable summary of the rest of the field; then he goes on to advocate “procognitive systems,” systems that will digest what’s known in any field and talk back to you, using techniques of artificial intelligence.
        Whatever its other merits, this book is great for shaking people up, especially librarians. It seems so official.

        Richard M. Laska, "All the News That’s Fit to Retrieve." Computer Decisions, Aug 72, pp. 18–22.

    Liveable cities

    Existe traducción al inglés del Documental Sobre Ruedas? ¿Qué hacen exactamente las cámaras en Madrid?

    11 June 2025
    Gabo H Beaumont

    My Road to Bitcoin

    The Moral Hazard from 2008-2009 shaped the way I see our current financial and democratic system. Early Days I first encountered Bitcoin in 2013. At the time, my partner Jorge and I were immersed in building a carsharing company in Madrid. We saw Bitcoin as the ideal payment option for our hourly rentals but never got around to integrating it. Even today, in 2025, mainstream businesses still struggle to accept Bitcoin—so you can imagine the challenges we faced in 2013. Moral Hazard The 2008 financial crisis hit Spain especially hard. It took us ages to recover compared to other countries. With my background in finance, business, and entrepreneurship—and an interest in Austrian economics—I was deeply frustrated by the root causes: rampant leveraged speculation, real estate bubbles, political corruption, extreme consumerism, and a general lack of intellectual and cultural development—yeah I have a polyhedric mix of Austrian and leftism—Worst of all, Wall Street got bailed out by printing more money. The moral hazard was undeniable. Many, including Satoshi Nakamoto, realized 2008 wasn’t just another economic downturn—it was proof the system was rigged. Entrepreneurial Process I believe society must protect and nurture the entrepreneurial process. Some criticize capitalism, but I love how it challenges the status quo. It’s about creation and flourishing, about changing social structures for the better. However, our fiat system incentivizes speculation over genuine production. I hate seeing how easily the current fiat system destroys the entrepreneurial process and, in general, the Human Condition. After 2008, I concluded that the current system is fundamentally broken—an opinion shared by many Bitcoiners. Around 2013, Bitcoin’s price spiked, and another bear market followed. I didn’t fully grasp the dynamics at the time, and after a while, I got consumed by building Bluemove Carsharing—renting hundreds of cars by the hour to thousands of people is as demanding as it sounds. Bitcoin faded into the background for me then. Elliptic Curve In 2016, we sold Bluemove to Europcar, and I spent three year helping them expand into new mobility services—great people, great team, incredible experience. I also renewed my interest in Bitcoin, digging into Programming Bitcoin and Mastering Bitcoin. This time, I was a stronger programmer, so the concepts around PKI, hash functions, and elliptic curves clicked into place. Once you understand discrete math and how Bitcoin’s cryptography works, it’s impossible to dismiss Bitcoin’s significance—or imagine a future where we just forget about it. Magic Crypto NYC By 2019, I had left Europcar and wanted to learn more about how Bitcoin really functioned and meet real people more than CryptoTwitter. I booked flights to major Bitcoin events in Amsterdam, London, NYC, Austin, Berlin, Barcelona, and El Salvador, seeking conversations with real Bitcoiners. I especially recall three events in 2019: From that point on, I decided to pursue Bitcoin wholeheartedly. It’s more than just technology; it’s a movement that challenges how we view money, finance, and trust. With Bitcoin and Lightning, we’re poised to shake the very foundations of the web—but this is another story. Mentions  

    26 May 2025
    Gabo H Beaumont

    As We May Think

    “Consider a future device …  in which an individual stores all his books, records, and communications, and which is mechanized so that it may be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility. It is an enlarged intimate supplement to his memory.” By Vannevar Bush Keywords: Keywords This has not been a scientist's war; it has been a war in which all have had a part. The scientists, burying their old professional competition in the demand of a common cause, have shared greatly and learned much. It has been exhilarating to work in effective partnership. Now, for many, this appears to be approaching an end. What are the scientists to do next? For the biologists, and particularly for the medical scientists, there can be little indecision, for their war has hardly required them to leave the old paths. Many indeed have been able to carry on their war research in their familiar peacetime laboratories. Their objectives remain much the same. WOW It is the physicists who have been thrown most violently off stride, who have left academic pursuits for the making of strange destructive gadgets, who have had to devise new methods for their unanticipated assignments. They have done their part on the devices that made it possible to turn back the enemy, have worked in combined effort with the physicists of our allies. They have felt within themselves the stir of achievement. They have been part of a great team. Now, as peace approaches, one asks where they will find objectives worthy of their best. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

    2 July 1945
    Gabo H Beaumont

    Notes

    12 May 2025
    Gabo H Beaumont

    Contact

    Hi there! I'd love to hear from you. Feel free to reach out anytime!

    28 April 2025
    Gabo H Beaumont

    Hypertext

    27 April 2025
    Gabo H Beaumont
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