Malairte Community, Events, and Workshops
Community resources, local meetups, veteran outreach, and beginner-friendly events for the Malairte (MLRT) network.
Browse Community
Sections
About
→What this hub is for and how to use it.
Beginner
→A plain-English place to start.
Advanced
→Deeper material once you have the basics.
Resources
→Every guide, how-to, and tool in one place.
Guides
→Long-form, evergreen walk-throughs.
How-To
→Short, task-shaped articles.
Tools
→Interactive calculators and planners.
FAQs
→Plain-English answers to common questions.
Glossary
→Definitions of the terms you will run into.
Articles
→Editorial coverage and analysis.
Community
→Local groups, events, and discussion.
Featured
Latest guides & how-tos
about
About the Malairte Community
An overview of taking part in the Malairte community and what this hub is for.
advanced
The Malairte Community: Advanced Topics
Deeper material for taking part in the Malairte community once you have the basics.
beginner
The Malairte Community: A Beginner's Guide
A plain-English starting point for taking part in the Malairte community.
guide
Choosing a friendly venue for a small crypto meetup
A walkthrough of realistic venue options for a hands-on Malairte meetup, with the questions to ask, the costs to expect, and the pitfalls to avoid.
guide
Starting a Local Malairte Meetup
A practical playbook for organising your first in-person Malairte (MLRT) workshop.
guide
A beginner-friendly guide to contributing to the Malairte open-source project
You do not need to be a senior developer to help the Malairte project. This guide maps out the many ways ordinary community members can contribute, from fixing a typo to running a node.
guide
Planning your first Malairte workshop from scratch
A practical planning guide for a relaxed, two-hour Malairte workshop covering venue, gear, agenda, and the small details that make first-time attendees feel welcome.
guide
Teaching kids about cryptocurrency safely and honestly
How to introduce children to Malairte and the ideas behind mineable cryptocurrency without putting real money in the room or accidentally turning the lesson into a sales pitch.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
- How do I run a meetup without it feeling like a sales pitch? +
- Lead with the wallet, lead with safety, and lead with hands-on. Have attendees set up the official Malairte wallet on their own laptop and run a few minutes of mining live during the session. Talk openly about realistic earnings, electricity costs, and the difference between Malairte and the coins they have seen advertised. Avoid speakers selling courses or hardware.
- How many people should I invite to my first Malairte meetup? +
- Four to eight people is the sweet spot for a first meetup. Small enough that you can answer every question, large enough that conversation flows without you carrying it. Invite ten and assume two will not show; that is normal for any free event. Resist the urge to scale up early. A meetup of six attentive humans creates more long-term community than a room of thirty distracted ones, because each person leaves with a wallet, a question answered, and a face they recognise next time. After your second or third successful small event, you will know which attendees want to help host the bigger one. Build the regulars first, then grow.
- Do I need any special permission to run a Malairte workshop in a public library? +
- In most public libraries, you only need to book a meeting room like any community group. Be straightforward with the librarian about what you are teaching: open source wallet software and the basics of mineable cryptocurrency. Describe the session as educational, free, and non-commercial. Hand them a one-paragraph summary they can share with their manager if asked. Libraries are usually fine with this once they understand you are not selling anything. If the library has a no-cryptocurrency policy, respect it and find another venue rather than arguing; the goodwill matters more than the room. Always follow the venue rules on food, noise, and tear-down time, and leave the room cleaner than you found it.
- How do I introduce Malairte to a veteran group without sounding like a sales pitch? +
- Lead with what you have in common, not with the coin. Most veteran groups respond well to topics framed around self-reliance, learning a skill, and using equipment they already own. Open with a single sentence: "This is a free software workshop where you can mine a small amount of cryptocurrency on the laptop you already own." Then stop. Let them ask. Avoid any language about returns, gains, or financial freedom. Bring printed handouts so people can take information home and decide in their own time. Offer a follow-up coffee for anyone who wants to dig deeper. Many veterans appreciate a slow, no-pressure introduction more than a polished presentation, and word of mouth in veteran communities is strong once trust is earned.
- What is the safest way to demonstrate mining to children? +
- Use a single demo laptop that you control, with a wallet created only for teaching. Never ask children to enter their own information, install software on their own devices, or touch a real personal wallet. Mine on the demo machine while the children watch the block explorer update on a projector. Any coins earned during the session stay on the demo wallet or go to a community education address. Keep the session under an hour, talk about electricity and effort in plain language, and finish with a short conversation about online scams aimed at kids. Send parents home with a one-page summary so they can continue the conversation. The goal is curiosity and critical thinking, not ownership.
- A friend keeps getting messages promising to double their Malairte. What do I tell them? +
- Tell them directly: nobody legitimate ever doubles your coins. That is the single most reliable rule in cryptocurrency. Any message offering to multiply funds in exchange for sending some first is a scam, every time, without exception. Walk them through the specific message together. Point out the urgency, the impersonation of a known person or project, and the address they were asked to send to. Suggest they block the sender and never reply, because replies confirm the account is active and invite more attempts. Encourage them to ask you before acting on any unsolicited crypto message for the next few months. Most scam victims report later that they sensed something was wrong but had nobody to check with.
Glossary
Key terms
- Code of Conduct
- A public document setting the behavioural ground rules for a community.
- Community Moderator
- A volunteer who keeps a community chat or meetup welcoming, on-topic, and free of scams.
- Issue Tracker
- The public list where bugs, feature requests, and tasks for a project are recorded and discussed.
- Maintainer
- A trusted contributor with the authority to review and merge changes into the main project.
- Meetup
- A small, informal gathering where people learn about Malairte and mineable cryptocurrency together.
- Open Source
- Software whose full source code is public, free to read, modify, and share.
Network
Explore the other Malairte hubs
Mining
↗Setup guides, pool lists, and benchmarks for CPU and GPU miners.
mining.malairtebitcoin.comEquipment
↗Hardware reviews and rig builds tuned for MLRTHash.
equipment.malairtebitcoin.comEnergy
↗Power costs, efficiency math, and sustainable mining.
energy.malairtebitcoin.comLearn
↗Plain-English explainers on proof-of-work and MLRT.
learn.malairtebitcoin.comMarket
↗Live price, listings, supply, and on-chain stats.
market.malairtebitcoin.comNodes
↗How to run a Malairte (MLRT) full node, validate the blockchain, stay in consensus, and keep the open peer-to-peer network healthy and decentralized.
nodes.malairtebitcoin.comFair Launch
↗How Malairte (MLRT) launched fairly — no premine, no ICO, no private sale, no founder allocation. Every coin is mined on open hardware from the public genesis block onward.
fairlaunch.malairtebitcoin.comSecurity
↗Protect your Malairte (MLRT): secure your wallet and seed phrase, verify official downloads, avoid phishing and fake wallets, and harden your mining rig against malware.
security.malairtebitcoin.comThe Project
New to Malairte Bitcoin?
MLRT is an open-source, CPU and GPU mineable proof-of-work cryptocurrency. Fair launch, 21M cap, 120-second blocks.