Roman Kropachek, American tech millionaire and a serial IT entrepreneur, is selling the first digital house on the Moon created as an ‘NFT’ or ‘non-fungible token’ starting at $100,000
(NEW YORK, N.Y.) NEWS: Today, Roman Kropachek, co-founder of CleverFiles, serial IT entrepreneur, has announced the bid for the first ever NFT house on the Moon. The project has been in development by the team of architects and 3D visual artists with a total of over 1500 hours invested in its design, and turned into a viable plan for construction, including a detailed 3D map, interior and exterior visualization and planning. The bid starts at $100,000 equivalent in Ether and is available for purchase at Open Sea.
May 20, 2021
Kropachek and his team spent 15,000 hours working on The First House on the Moon NFT.
The Corrupted Aesthetics NFTs will each go for an ETH amount equivalent to £36,070.
Per Kropachek, this project is personal and CleverFiles does not plan to accept crypto.
Roman Kropachek, a renowned technology millionaire that has more than 20 years of experience in IT, has dipped his toes in the NFT space. According to a press release shared with Invezz, Kropachek, who is also the co-founder of software development firm CleverFiles, is selling an NFT “The First House on the Moon” on the Open Sea marketplace.
Disk Drill 4.3 is the first data recovery app to run a native Deep Scan of system drives and the only available solution to recover deleted user folders on Macs powered by M1 chips
ALEXANDRIA, Va. /Massachusetts Newswire – National News/ CleverFiles announces the release of their latest update of Disk Drill for Mac. Now the new Disk Drill 4.3 natively deep-scans system drives on Macs powered by Apple’s M1 chips without compromising on speed and efficiency of the recovery process.
To achieve the required level of decryption and access, Disk Drill deploys its own kernel extension, known as kext. With a number of system-level and administrator’s approvals, this enables Disk Drill to securely search for lost data in all user folders and system locations on the internal drives in macOS Big Sur on M1 Macs.
CleverFiles
2 hrs ago
Disk Drill 4.3 is the first data recovery app to run a native Deep Scan of system drives and the only available solution to recover deleted user folders on Macs powered by M1 chips
ALEXANDRIA, Va., April 7, 2021 (SEND2PRESS NEWSWIRE) CleverFiles announces the release of their latest update of Disk Drill for Mac. Now the new Disk Drill 4.3 natively deep-scans system drives on Macs powered by Apple’s M1 chips without compromising on speed and efficiency of the recovery process.
To achieve the required level of decryption and access, Disk Drill deploys its own kernel extension, known as kext. With a number of system-level and administrator’s approvals, this enables Disk Drill to securely search for lost data in all user folders and system locations on the internal drives in macOS Big Sur on M1 Macs.
Disk Drill 4.3 is the first data recovery app to run a native Deep Scan of system drives and the only available solution to recover deleted user folders on Macs powered by M1 chips
(ALEXANDRIA, Va.) NEWS: CleverFiles announces the release of their latest update of Disk Drill for Mac. Now the new Disk Drill 4.3 natively deep-scans system drives on Macs powered by Apple’s M1 chips without compromising on speed and efficiency of the recovery process.
To achieve the required level of decryption and access, Disk Drill deploys its own kernel extension, known as kext. With a number of system-level and administrator’s approvals, this enables Disk Drill to securely search for lost data in all user folders and system locations on the internal drives in macOS Big Sur on M1 Macs.