Bitcoin Forum

Alternate cryptocurrencies => Altcoin Discussion => Topic started by: TheSmo on December 22, 2013, 10:37:49 PM



Title: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: TheSmo on December 22, 2013, 10:37:49 PM
Hi all,

how do you guys decide, which coins you mine or where you invest in (long-term)?`

You can't check, what makes a lot noise in this board alone, so what other resources do you use? Or what indicators do you think help? E.G. I can check Google Trends, but that works only, if a coin is already pretty big (like DOGE in a short time).

But what other factors can I take in my sight? For example I check the description and think about "will someone else be impressed by this text". I believe, if the coin has nothing in the description that makes a difference plus it's not unique in it's writing/story telling, then I personally believe, it will not work.

But what you guys think? Are USPs important or is it more important that the technique behind is better than BTC? If so, what are the indicators? What other things do you think will decide about a win or loss for a coin?


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: Pythonideus on December 22, 2013, 10:40:25 PM
Step 1: Mine new coins on day 1

Step 2: Wait for an exchange to add it

Step 3: Dump it like you just ate Chipotle

Step 4: ?????????

Step 5: Profit


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: qiwoman on December 22, 2013, 10:44:54 PM
Shouldn't the popularity of usage also be a prerequisite for a coin's success? Or is like more big guns can back a coin more popular it gets and then it is pumped and dumped? I am sure there is a lot of shady stuff going on in the back round as well as legit indicators.


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: prins on December 23, 2013, 12:44:43 AM
Most coins launched lately are pretty much pump and dump.
Popularity has a great influence on a coin, aswell as the developers and the community around it.
Since Doge was mentioned here before, its a fun coin i didnt expect it to make it but popularity won it over. Does it have a bright future? We dunno, sofar it has been pumped and dumped but its not over yet, it had alot of hype and still seems used. It could very well stay the coin of choice for the young crowds..

The way i decide if i like a coin or not:
Whats the premine (if any), heavy premine means i stay away from it. Small amounts are acceptable for bounties/giveaways to promote the coin. But theres coins that overdo it and just become unworthy.
Just the name of a coin can be important already, a good name helps in popularity which can result in adaption and a possible future for it.
Does it have anything new to offer? Or is it just a clone. Most things have been done already so if your just cloning something why use that coin instead of established coins that offer the same?
Who is making it, are the dev(s) dedicated. Devs are the driving force behind the coin, community are the ones supporting them but they aint the driving force behind it.
And finally the specs of it (block time/amount/transaction times) matter too ofc.



Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: NUFCrichard on December 23, 2013, 12:50:52 AM
I think a few CPU and GPU coins will make it, but it is very hard to say which.
Primecoin, litecoin and peer coin look like they are here for the long run, quark seems the favourite of the new CPU only coins, despite it's fast mining. The lack of future incentive to mine might be an issue though.

One or two other CPU coins could succeed in my opinion. No idea which though unfortunately.  I think the name of the coin is very important, can you imagine a coin with a "funny" name actually being globally used?


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: brekyrself on December 23, 2013, 01:53:18 AM
Look for a coin with innovation that builds upon btc, not copies it.

-Litecoin is still a contender as it provides great diversification of hash power.
-Hybrid coins that combine POW and POS are interesting as they distribute coins with POW and get rid of wasted computer cycles by switching to POS later on.
-Protoshares, Bitshares, and Keyhotee can really change things if launched successfully and in a timely manner.


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: FrictionlessCoin on December 23, 2013, 03:41:14 AM
Just unbelievable that people don't look at supply and demand in determining the long term prospects of a coin.


Unbelieveable!


One metric,  learn it well... network hash rate.  That and miner subsidy rate is all that realy counts.


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: TheSmo on December 23, 2013, 02:40:35 PM
I am surprised that some of you say, the hash rate is key to success... why?

Are you talking about mining time or are you talking about the time to process a deal? Mining time is, in my opinion, not relevant for the long term success of a coin, processing time is (imo).


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: cevirmen on December 23, 2013, 02:53:27 PM
I think Netcoin will use advantage of its global name in the long term and when mining it becomes difficult enough, it'll rise and be in top 5.


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: Kungfucheez on December 23, 2013, 03:05:57 PM
It all depends. It's called speculation for a reason, there is no definite answer anyone can give you because no one can see into the future, you just have to try and make a good guess and hope you're right.


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: markm on December 23, 2013, 03:09:23 PM
Look at the hashing power and difficulty. If less than half of the hardware in the world that is capable of mining it is mining it then it is way too vulnerable, so basically for each type of non merged mined hashing (SHA, scrypt, prime numbers etc) check out the one that has more than half of the hashing power, for starters.

For example primecoin and protoshares both use CPU mining, so which of them has more than half of the world's CPU power mining them?

Ooops, neither. CPU is a really crappy choice because it is unlikely that as much as half of the world's CPU power is even mining at all, let alone all mining the same coin.

So forget all the ones that are CPU-mined, until they come up with ASICs to do their mining they are trainwrecks waiting to happen.

(Waiting to become valuable enough to be worth wrecking, so I guess if you are only looking for crappy little penny-stock type toys they are fine, but if you are interested in coins worth $300,000 or more per coin forget all the CPU and GPU mining crap, get ASICs deployed as soon as possible or just assume the great chain robbery will happen as soon as it is profitable for the robbers to make it happen.)

So hmm I guess we are down to bitcoin and maybe a few of the coins merged mined with bitcoin (those that have more than half as much hashpower/difficulty as bitcoin)...

Oh proof of stake? Last I heard is still doesn't work without proof of work, plus, the actual proof of stake itself has a man-in-the-middle, much like Solidcoin, it seems. A gang is already sitting there with their hands on the wreck-switch just waiting for the right time to pull a heist...

-MarkM-


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: Slingshot on December 23, 2013, 09:19:33 PM


                     MARKETING.
                    =========



Caveat emptor - let the buyer beware!




Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: FrictionlessCoin on December 27, 2013, 06:46:16 PM
Look at the hashing power and difficulty. If less than half of the hardware in the world that is capable of mining it is mining it then it is way too vulnerable, so basically for each type of non merged mined hashing (SHA, scrypt, prime numbers etc) check out the one that has more than half of the hashing power, for starters.

For example primecoin and protoshares both use CPU mining, so which of them has more than half of the world's CPU power mining them?

Ooops, neither. CPU is a really crappy choice because it is unlikely that as much as half of the world's CPU power is even mining at all, let alone all mining the same coin.

So forget all the ones that are CPU-mined, until they come up with ASICs to do their mining they are trainwrecks waiting to happen.

(Waiting to become valuable enough to be worth wrecking, so I guess if you are only looking for crappy little penny-stock type toys they are fine, but if you are interested in coins worth $300,000 or more per coin forget all the CPU and GPU mining crap, get ASICs deployed as soon as possible or just assume the great chain robbery will happen as soon as it is profitable for the robbers to make it happen.)

So hmm I guess we are down to bitcoin and maybe a few of the coins merged mined with bitcoin (those that have more than half as much hashpower/difficulty as bitcoin)...

Oh proof of stake? Last I heard is still doesn't work without proof of work, plus, the actual proof of stake itself has a man-in-the-middle, much like Solidcoin, it seems. A gang is already sitting there with their hands on the wreck-switch just waiting for the right time to pull a heist...

-MarkM-



I really can't think of how a pure 'proof of stake' system can secure its block chain.   The calculations of a 'proof of stake' system can always be easily replicated.  So how does such a system ensure that it has the 'longest block chain'?


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: samesstee on December 27, 2013, 06:52:25 PM


                     MARKETING.
                    =========



Caveat emptor - let the buyer beware!





+1

the technical details & implementation will follow VERY shortly after


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: Nullu on December 27, 2013, 06:54:09 PM


                     MARKETING.
                    =========



Caveat emptor - let the buyer beware!





+1

the technical details & implementation will follow VERY shortly after

I've got this idea for a coin. It'll have some difficulty, and name, and some block reward. It will have a name like coin something, or something coin. You in? 10 trillion coin bounty to whoever does the coin. Then sends me 100 trillion so I can pay them.


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: kalus on December 27, 2013, 06:55:40 PM
Most coins launched lately are pretty much pump and dump.
------- cut thread here -----


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: markm on December 28, 2013, 04:44:05 AM
I think a few CPU and GPU coins will make it, but it is very hard to say which.
Primecoin, litecoin and peer coin look like they are here for the long run, quark seems the favourite of the new CPU only coins, despite it's fast mining. The lack of future incentive to mine might be an issue though.

One or two other CPU coins could succeed in my opinion. No idea which though unfortunately.  I think the name of the coin is very important, can you imagine a coin with a "funny" name actually being globally used?

The name is money.

Call it moola, bread, dough, quid, quid pro quo, whatever, the name is not important because anyone can call it anything they like.

You could make a Bitcoin client that calls millibitcoins "Moola" or "Money" and splashes "The Internet Money" all over its "creatives" (art, ads, etc), "TIM" for short, who cares, as long as what the name refers to is actually, under the hood, real bitcoins it will work fine and people can call it whatever they like.

Or put a "worldcoin" skin on the client, or a cat or dog or pony-show (my little pony, anyone?) and it will still work.

Disney could sell Bitcoin clients with Mickey Mouse and/or Donald Duck and/or Scrooge McDuck plastered all over it and call microbitcoins Duckcoins, it does not matter, it is just another brand of client for the same thing: money.

Or they could make a Princess Points client that calls satoshis or microbitcoins or millibitcoins Princess Points. Whatever.

-MarkM-


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: Slingshot on December 28, 2013, 06:22:47 AM
Look at the hashing power and difficulty. If less than half of the hardware in the world that is capable of mining it is mining it then it is way too vulnerable, so basically for each type of non merged mined hashing (SHA, scrypt, prime numbers etc) check out the one that has more than half of the hashing power, for starters.

For example primecoin and protoshares both use CPU mining, so which of them has more than half of the world's CPU power mining them?

Ooops, neither. CPU is a really crappy choice because it is unlikely that as much as half of the world's CPU power is even mining at all, let alone all mining the same coin.

So forget all the ones that are CPU-mined, until they come up with ASICs to do their mining they are trainwrecks waiting to happen.

(Waiting to become valuable enough to be worth wrecking, so I guess if you are only looking for crappy little penny-stock type toys they are fine, but if you are interested in coins worth $300,000 or more per coin forget all the CPU and GPU mining crap, get ASICs deployed as soon as possible or just assume the great chain robbery will happen as soon as it is profitable for the robbers to make it happen.)

So hmm I guess we are down to bitcoin and maybe a few of the coins merged mined with bitcoin (those that have more than half as much hashpower/difficulty as bitcoin)...

Oh proof of stake? Last I heard is still doesn't work without proof of work, plus, the actual proof of stake itself has a man-in-the-middle, much like Solidcoin, it seems. A gang is already sitting there with their hands on the wreck-switch just waiting for the right time to pull a heist...

-MarkM-



 To MarkM,

 With all due respect:

 Would you care to explain to the rest of us exactly how for example: CPU mined  Securecoin and Quark are allegedly  'train-wrecks waiting to happen'??? And of course Primecoin too since it's not quite as well secured against attack exploits as the first two mentioned CPU mined Crypto (Securecoin and Quark).  

I say BULLSHIT to this claim of MarkM's. And I am requesting that you explain yourself here!
 I will also PM you if you don't soon respond here in this tread. I for one desire answers and I am quite serious about getting some here, just in case your really in the know about something(s) that no one else is.

 MarkM this is serious stuff your claiming here.

 These FUD Posts like MarkM's have gone way too far, and if you care to witness even more Bit-Shit Shock & Awe well all you have to do now is sit back and watch with horror cause your types are behaving as badly as the Evil Banksters have all along, and fully deserve some real Shock & Awe. Don't fret, there's much more Blow-back coming your way unless you can convince us your not full of bit-shit! Myself and the rest here are sick and tired of this greed gone insane by a few Bitcoin Exclusive Types. If you clowns want a war of words you might want to fast reconsider that notion because the result is going to harm yourselves much more than anyone else. I can assure you of that much, and much more.

 Also MarkM, please explain how the GPU mined coins are so apt to have these same problems when other expert developers don't concur with your statements at all. In fact quite the opposite as I recall learning, since now Bit-shit (Bitcoin) is growing ever more Centralized, and of course heading in exactly the opposite direction of what Satoshi intended for.

 And after all since Satoshi himself owns a full 8% of all Bit-shit coins in existence and are worth near a Billion dollars already, and it would seem the biggest Insta-Mine in all history is Bit-shit (Bitcoin). And by a very, very wide margin I must add!

 And all it takes to crash his very own masterpiece is for Satoshi to dump just a small fraction of his coins to possibly fix what has gone so terribly wrong with what I now refer to as Bit-shit (btc), but only because of your own misdeeds MarkM, (your FUD Post here) and because of many other FUD Posts from these other clowns that suddenly got lucky. And are obviously overcome by greed and fraud in this 2nd Gilded Age of Greed & Fraud. A term I coined long ago btw.

  I must add it's past time to again go on the offensive. Brace for sudden impact. Blow-back as they say is a real Bitch! And going forward it's Bit-shit that is directly in the line of fire from the most powerful forces to ever walk this earth. Might want to change your tactics MarkM and collaborators. Your side needs all the friends it can muster. Otherwise no matter what the current King of Crypto wont go anywhere near as far as it possibly could. These are merely sage words to consider and reflect on there.

BTW MarkM it's Bitcoin that is most vulnerable of all to a 51% attack, and by an extremely wide margin since these ASIC warehouse mining centers came on line, and all it takes now is the coordination of a few of them with just a couple of giant and vastly over-centralized mining collectives (mega sized pools) to fully and completely attack and crush Bitcoin. But then why would any of them care to do that? Or is that not all precisely correct MarkM? Of course MarkM must know all about that though?

 And MarkM? You claim others, or maybe yourself are just laying in wait for it to be 'profitable enough' to attack these other cryptos. Well that's great! Now the Fed's, Interpol and the Russian FSB, and other global Intel and law enforcement agencies know exactly maybe to whom to home in on should that ever happen. Gee, it must be terrifying to think one can be disappeared and never as much as be allowed an attorney, much less see the light of any courtroom all for being so very stupid enough to babble pure bullshit and nonsense, and then threaten to attack others assets in the light of a chat-room being constantly monitored by all those just mentioned and more!


 MarkM: Quote: "Look at the hashing power and difficulty. If less than half of the hardware in the world that is capable of mining it is mining it then it is way too vulnerable"

 What does that even mean? What are you implying? Even Bitcoin was first only mined by CPU only. Then after further development along came GPU mining. And finally ASIC.


 As of now both Securecoin and Quark are mighty resistant to any and all ASIC attacks today and for the foreseeable future. Period. And much more resistant than any other Crypto, bar NONE. Period. And by enormous real world margins I must add.

 Much the same but to lesser degree are all Scrypt type coins. Their all extremely ASIC Resistant to attacks. Thus vastly superior to Bit-shit (Bitcoin, lol) and all other mere PoW type Crypto-coins that each passing day grow ever more prone to ever more centralization and 51% attacks.

 And all we have to do is look around and see that there are zero ASIC Scrypt mining rigs anywhere to know that's a fact about Scrypt Type coins. And that is extremely likely to stay that way for more than plenty long enough time to mine plenty enough to make at least the attacks themselves impossible in the real world since mining Scrypt just keeps growing and growing ever more DECENTRALIZED as time passes. But you didn't touch that thought either MarkM.

 Much less the overwhelmingly superior Scrypt Pow/PoS hybrid crypto's already on scene, which are of course vastly more secure against any and all attacks than any mere PoW Only SHA-256 type crypto can ever be, plus even more secure than mere PoW Scrypt coins too. But you didn't mention any of that either did you MarkM?

 MarkM: Your belief appears on the surface to be entirely self serving FUD, and without merit.[/b] Yet I see here you are indeed an early adopter? And have been around these parts far longer than almost anyone else? So I have to give credit there that maybe your on to something that others would really like to much better understand? Is that true? Your on to something no one else yet understands? Am I completely mistaken and wrong? And your correct?

 As for 51% attacks your statements appear as complete FUD, unless you know something we don't, and all the other developers don't.
 

 Hybrid PoW/PoS crypto types are vastly superior to the PoW only types. With PoS tossed in suddenly any 51% attacks requires the attacker to first acquire 51% of the coins themselves.[/b] But you didn't care to attack that notion either. Instead just vague statements without any elaboration. Seems like FEAR is getting the best of MarkM ? Or is this merely pure FUD in the face of shameless greed gone wild?

 Or does MarkM really know something that no one else seemingly does and doesn't care to explain in detail to us mere mortals?


 So MarkM, do you care to share your vastly superior intellect with the rest of us as to why you stated what you did? Or are you merely full of FUD?

 And by all means share all the reasoning behind your claims?

 Or is this exactly what my instincts tell me it is (FUD)?

 Plus likely your extreme fears that the founding PoW Crypto types ares going to face a tough future against vastly superior Crypto Types that have already arrived on scene? After all they took everything good about Bitcoin and made themselves even better. But then that's the exact way technology works isn't it MarkM?



Caveat emptor - let the buyer beware!


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: datguyian on December 28, 2013, 06:41:24 AM
Here are a few things I look at:

1) is it innovative? What new features does it offer? Will those new features offer a big advantage over previous altcoin features?

2) is it gaining popularity? Is that popularity mostly among newbies are senior members?  Have anyone specified why it will do better than the rest with good reasoning?

3) what separates it from the rest? Some solid feature, or just a meme (IE dogecoin)?

4) is the developer active and improving features, performance and innovation daily?

5) how is the community reacting? If it is just a bunch of newbies jumping on a bandwagon, the coin will be worthless in no time. If there are legitimate reasons for the community acting positively, it may be worth your interest.

Everyone wants to make a quick dime, myself included. But if you really read into these things sometimes, ypu may find the value that patience might have in your investments.

Don't gete wrong, I love to spend a few bucks on something that might turn into a few hundred or thousand bucks overnight. But you have to obtain some what of a long view in these things, and acknowledge the guys that are revolutionizing crypto currency anday get you rich in a few years.


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: markm on December 28, 2013, 06:48:17 AM
Bitcoin is only now starting to become reasonably secure, because it is starting to deploy ASICs.

Until Bitcoin deployed ASICs, it was vulnerable to any government, corporation, terrorist group etc willing to create such ASICs with which to attack Bitcoin.

Being hard to make ASICs for, such as various altcoins attempt to do, does indeed make it harder for attackers to produce such ASICs.

But it also makes it harder for defenders to do so.

Until they do deploy ASICs to secure their blockchains, they are vulnerable not merely to all the general purpose computing equipment such as CPUs GPUs and FPGAs that could at any time turn against them or be hired/rented to use against them but also to any group that chooses to create special purpose ASICs suitable for attacking with.

So the sooner litecoin or doge or whatever is going to turn out to be "the" secure scrypt coin - the one that has over half of the scrypt hashing power in the world defending it - gets its own dedicated ASICs deployed the better for its chances of becoming a serious player.

The rest will hopefully change their hashing method to something only they have ASICs designed and deployed for.

-MarkM-


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: optikalsaint on December 28, 2013, 07:15:59 AM
You can have all the fancy bells and whistles available when it comes to the technology behind your coin, but if a user interested in your coin goes to your website and it looks like something that was thrown together in 2005 or earlier then there is a chance it is not going to catch on. At the end of the day we are talking about finances and most people feel more comfortable dealing with their money in a bank with clean carpets, comfy chairs, plants, and employees with buttoned up shirts then they do in a shady check cashing store where you have to talk to someone through 6+ inches of bullet proof glass. Appearance and marketing matter.

I think the name is pretty important too. When ProtoShares came out it took me weeks to stop calling it PhotoShares. In my head it looked too much like PhotoShop so my brain jelly kept mashing them together and somehow that approach made it stick with me. Same thing with Megacoin. Its simple, easy to remember, catchy, and easy to commit to memory (and it also doesn't hurt to look so similar to the other Mega online properties that people are familiar with.)

Also taking into account the number of coins that will be generated. Some coins like DOGE have already generated a ridiculous amount of coins where you have people trading them at hundreds of thousands to millions at a time. I've always thought of matters that involved finances to be like that of the theater and the number one rule of the stage is to always leave them wanting more. Take the Motorola RAZR and Apple iPhone for instance. When they were released they had catchy memorable names, a great marketing presence, and each company purposely made them scarce to make people want them more, work hard to obtain them, and inflate the amount of profit they were generating.

At the end of the day your technology behind any coin can be amazing but people like pretty shiny things. Sometimes they like funny things like DOGE but eventually things stop being funny and the joke ends up jumping the shark.


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: markm on December 28, 2013, 07:46:35 AM
A ponzi that has a fancy office with nice carpets and so on is still a scam.

Put your pretty cosmetics and marketing onto something actually worthwhile, something that is not so pathetically insecure that a stupid meme can dwarf its hashing power overnight....

People do not particularly like banks that leave their vaults wide open so that a flash crowd conjured up overnight by an internet meme can just walk in and take all the money.

The fancy carpets are mere con-job, scam, bullshit, part of the scam, if there is not first off a vault...

So first off design your ASIC, so your chain will not be vulnerable to any other chain's ASICs.

Then launch the ASICs the same day you launch the chain, and hope that defenders of the chain buy more of them than attackers do.

Cute dog shaped USB ASICs might turn out to sell really well. Or maybe not.

But don't just have the cute little stocking-stuffer USB ones for the masses, also have serious 28 or 20 nano process node rigs for the businesses, banks, etc to use so they can feel confident their money will be secure.

-MarkM-


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: Slingshot on December 28, 2013, 08:09:32 AM
Hey MarkM,

 Why if Bitcoin is so secure do they not even offer a secure home page to visit?

  Or for Christ sakes even as much as a secure download page for their end user clients. As in https ?

 Much the same for the suggested 3rd party wallets too? All from unsecured http sites. How lame.

 Even Litecoin fully utilizes https (secure home page and download sites)  Much less many other Crypto types. Sure lesser one's don't. But at least all the serious ones offer SECURE https DOWNLOAD PAGES. But not Bit-shit. Why exactly is that? I forget? O yea...

 But Bitcoin stated it wasn't realistic to do such a thing, or something to that effect lol, whatever. I have that saved somewhere, that responce from bitcoin developers in an e-mail.

 It's entirely irresponsible not to protect ALL those that visit bitcoin.org, and especially those that download it's most popular windows end user client. Above all else protect those that don't know to protect themselves. Even the Banksters know that much. Gee, ya think?

 Sure they can check the digital sig on that download but the typical end user doesn't even know what the heck that is! But that doesn't protect them from being followed home by the likes of assholes that belong in the gas chambers. In other words they can be sniffed and their IP's logged when merely visiting either bitcoin.org or the end user download clients webpage, both beling merely http  

 And then their going to soon be owned if any assholes are lurking there for their next victims. And all because Bitcoin.org didn't care to secure it's own end users.

 So unless of course their on TOR and/or using a secure VPN their wide open to exploitation and attack, and bit-shit doesn't give a damn about that either, at least not so far!

  How do I know that? Because I was one of the few that tried in vain this year to fix that issue, and bitcoin developers dismissed the need for it. And just another reason why your hero Bit-shit is a failure and disaster waiting to occur just as soon as more blow-back hits the airwaves! The lead developer as well as the entire USA based Bitcoin Foundation needs to be replaced if they cannot get their acts together very fast. Already the vast majority is fed up to the max with their bullshit. Soon it will be entirely overwhelming and a mass mutiny should things not swiftly and entirely change for the better. How would I know such a thing. Because I am not a wet behind the ears greenhorn man-child.

 You can ramble on with your clueless comments MarkM till hell freezes over but after reviewing the last one in this thread I have already discounted entirely your knowledge of just about everything concerning crypto's. Or at the very least your credibility is shot to hell and worse after these last couple posts of yours here in this thread as far as I am concerned. But by all means prove me wrong!



Caveat emptor - let the buyer beware!


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: Slingshot on December 28, 2013, 08:19:03 AM

Bitcoin is only now starting to become reasonably secure, because it is starting to deploy ASICs...
-MarkM-



WRONG. FLAT OUT DEAD WRONG. In fact the exact opposite in true. See my prior post for that! Of course all your FUD is wrong on this thread MarkM, and I believe you know that.
 
 I would ask what the hell are you smoking tonight but why bother beating on yet another dead horse?




 Goodnight folks, & Good Luck. With clowns like this the driving force behind Bitcoin we are all going to need a ton of Luck, especially Bitcoin (Bit-shit)!



Caveat emptor - let the buyer beware!


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: markm on December 28, 2013, 08:22:45 AM
Huh? Your points merely underline the fact that securing a blockchain based currency is insanely massively expensive and difficult.

You evidently agree with me that even Bitcoin, with all the millions or billions spent on it so far, is still not secure.

The whole https ecosystem is insecure, it is itself a man in the middle attack in effect, even ignoring all the demonstrated hacks against it.

It seems mostly to install a false sense of security into people.

So yes work is going on to develop and deploy better security than https.

In the meanwhile signatures work fine, and if your grandmother or who-ever cannot handle signatures then isn't that a business-opportunity to come up with something better than the broken-by-design https system and the inability of the marketers / educators / browser or client interface designers to design a signature system that grandma can understand?

Oh wait, my distro does check signatures when it downloads and installs packages, doesn't yours?

Yes there is lots of work still to be done to secure even just one single chain.

Blockchains are insanely expensive to secure. It is not even clear yet that even one single blockchain can be secured, let alone more than one.

Maybe blockchains are just too impractical for real world use and we need something better.

-MarkM-


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: mnghwa on December 28, 2013, 09:36:33 AM
i don't think we should bother with prediction. For instance, i mine 10-10000 coins, depends on difficulty and move along (laptop mining).
I usually get more coins from giveaway then from mining, but hey, that's just me. I'm just not all into this altcoin thing to earn money. Just gathering wallets like numismatic :)

I think those who got real khas/Mhash in their pocket should use multipool/hashcows to earn some money. I know guy who's earning 40-60$ a day which is much in my country (like 200-300$ / day in USA). He invested in hardware when bitcoin difficulty was small so he already pay it off.

The main altcoin problem is their diversity. Too many of them on same amount of people. Let say there are 10,000 people trading 50 types altcoins. Thats just too much types of altoins. Altcoins traders pool must be above 100,000 or more. Number of traders were taken as example.

Altcoin stream has to work on marketing - demand must rise as much as possible (alson gonna take time).


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: kalus on December 28, 2013, 08:12:50 PM
Would you care to explain to the rest of us exactly how for example: CPU mined  Securecoin and Quark are allegedly  'train-wrecks waiting to happen'??? And of course Primecoin too since it's not quite as well secured against attack exploits as the first two mentioned CPU mined Crypto (Securecoin and Quark).  

I say BULLSHIT to this claim of MarkM's. And I am requesting that you explain yourself here!
 I will also PM you if you don't soon respond here in this tread. I for one desire answers and I am quite serious about getting some here, just in case your really in the know about something(s) that no one else is.
MarkM's point about CPU mining being eventually wrecked by ASICs is correct.

take a step back from your investments and fealty to CPU coins for a second and use what happened to bitcoin as a roadmap.

bitcoin started with CPU mining, which was quickly overtaken by GPU mining.  

FPGAs quickly followed, because they're easy to program and customise.  then fabs for asics ramped up, and now the difficulty is out of reach for hobby miners.

CPU coins will eventually fall to the same fate, because technology progresses, and people have always come up with tech to innovate around roadblocks (e.g. scrypt).

think of FPGA and ASICs as disruptive technology.  there is no point pissing against the wind.

MarkM is correct about ASIC technology eventually crushing CPU power.  ASICs should not be percieved as a personal threat to your income stream; they should be viewed as insuring the integrity of the coins themselves. MarkM also discusses this in detail.

computers go obsolete.  your phone has a more powerful computer than the apollo spacecraft.  is it really 'bullshit' that nobody would ever be able to design an ASIC to emulate CPU mining?  

Not only will it happen, it will happen much sooner than you will expect.  


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: Slingshot on December 28, 2013, 11:27:37 PM
Your full of crap! And thanks for proving that here. My mission is accomplished.

"FEAR, FEAR, FEAR...bla bla bla"

 "Wild Eyed Conspiracy Theory...bla bla bla"

"Sell sell sell"

 "You must believe because we are the only path to greatness...".

 'You must Buy Bit-Crap (Bitcoin)'.
==================================================

 So you ignore the FACT that https is extremely hard to hack compared to http

 And ignore that packet sniffers cannot sniff https to determine who is visiting
thus protecting users from follow home assholes, maybe just like yourselves.

 Thus twisting and spinning to the point of utter proof that your as silly as a
little bitch pissing in gale force headwinds with your invalid BitCrap claims and
comparisons of which your merely talking out the side of your crooked, lying
mouths, or merely talking about topics you clearly don't understand nor have
any practical expert knowledge of. No wonder the entire Bitcoin ecosystem today
is clamoring for drastic changes from the top down inside of the Bitcoin Community!

 And as for all this other nonsense you spout that you think you know what
your talking about. YOU DON'T. You Know that. Or at least I strongly suspect that
you know your being extremely disingenuous and completely insincere. And in case
you didn't know that until know, well now you do!

Your living proof what a bunch of ass-wipes many are today in this 2nd Gilded Age
of Greed & Fraud.

 Toss in the multitude of other points retorted that again you absolutely dismissed
and refused to touch on at all and it's glaringly obvious who is full of Bullshit!

 Lastly, you haven't got even nary a clue about what you have been muttering
on about. You compare apples to oranges than make a fools comparison.

 As for Bitcoin: Well I was and am a huge fan of it. But when Bit-Crap
ass-wipe clowns insist on lying, spreading misinformation, and disinformation, as
well as pure FUD and worse then I don't hesitate to rub the truth in their faces. As
well as call them exactly what they are themselves. As for your spinning things to
suit your needs and desires; it merely proves you have sociopath tendencies.

 Thanks all the same but NO Thanks. I wont be grossly over supporting an inferior
Crypto such as Bitcoin. Especially over other vastly superior ones that are in a
new vastly superior league (PoW/PoS Hybrids). And as for them being anything that
you claim: your full of BitSHIT.

 

Caveat emptor - let the buyer beware!


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: kalus on December 29, 2013, 01:28:58 AM
Your full of crap! And thanks for proving that here. My mission is accomplished.

[inane, ritalin-fueled rant deleted]

Caveat emptor - let the buyer beware!
lol,like pearls before swine. 


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: markm on December 29, 2013, 05:53:52 AM
Also, difficulty is far from out of reach of hobby miners.

Little USB munchkin miners are still making money, and could be had for only about $13 to $15 or so at one point.

It is much easier on a hobbyist budget to pick up a $13 to $15 item from time to time - or heck even pay $20 to $30 each for some a friend of a friend is phasing out as he moved on to larger rigs as a friend of a friend recently did - than to blow $150 or more at a time picking up a used GPU on Kijiji or Craigslist or whatever.

-MarkM-


Title: Re: How to indicate, which cryptocoin will "make it"?
Post by: zavtra on December 29, 2013, 06:03:10 AM
I think anonymity will be important, which is something StableCoin will offer with its mixed transaction service, which is supposed to beat CoinValidation.

I would also definitely say that stability in general is key for any currency that is regularly used, so the name is great, although I'm not sure if its features actually bring it stability, but regardless, the name fits.

Other features are probably how much can be available. Inflation is also going to be necessary, as it encourages spending, which peercoin has.