Well worth the read. I also found it from the Etherflow ANN. All the "your project is so amazing" posts baffle me, even though I know its devs or SMO agencies. I can't see why without the roadmap and white paper anyone would comment on the future viability of a crypto, but I guess when all your trying to do is convince a newb they are missing something, it works. But it's like hearing a new CPU manufacturer is going to compete with AMD and Intel (who has never built a chip to your knowledge & has no experienced employees in chip manufacturing) and then post comments about how they will take over the entire market, and your "going all in". It's a joke, but there are still people out there who believe Bill Gates will pay for their child's college tuition of they forward his email chain letter to another 30 people! So I'm sure there are people still stupid enough to believe anything in writing on the internet, even bitcointalk spammers and trolls.
Now don't get me wrong I enjoy a good airdrop, it's like finding a penny on the street. It's not worth much, but if you pick up every penny, nickel, dime and quarter you ever see laying around it adds up. So I enjoy joining them, and use the way the project handles themselves for distribution of airdrop, handling of support issues within telegram/discord, and how often they actually post code updates to their repository to determine how viable the coin might eventually be. Github might be confusing for those not into programming, but once you understand what a commit and PR is and how to look at them you have a decent ability to determine how much activity there is, even if its just a simple count of changed lines of code over time, it gives you an idea of how productive the project is trying to be.
Beware and be safe.
CryptoCarl