 Why can't difficulty adjust a little quicker? I assume that's referring to the Bitcoin difficulty adjustment algorithm and why it's set to 2016 blocks rather than more frequent. The reason really is to prevent oscillation. What you don't want to do is have a situation as occurred in Bitcoin Cash, where rapid changes in difficulty cause miners to turn off or turn on equipment, especially when there are other chains that benefit from SHA-256 mining equipment, where when the difficulty changes, miners may decide to leave the chain to go to another chain that's more profitable, just temporarily more profitable, and then move back when the profitability changes. That causes a whiplash effect where the hash rate varies very, very rapidly, and it oscillates around the mean. A bit like the kind of old school cruise control, where they used analog circuits that weren't very accurate at maintaining speed, so you would end up missing the mark when your car accelerated, overshooting, then slowing down too hard, undershooting, and ended up in an oscillation effect around the mean speed that you want to maintain. There's a whole science of how you do kind of approaching or asymptotically approaching or gradually approaching a mean that you're trying to target without causing oscillations, sorry, oscillations like that, and I don't think, honestly, that that's a parameter we should start tweaking, and more importantly, even if I did think, or many of us thought that that's a parameter we should start tweaking, I would doubt you would get much support. Bitcoin, as I've said before, is a very conservatively developed system for good reason. If you enjoyed this video, please subscribe, like, and share. All my work is shared for free, so if you wanna support it, join me on Patreon.