Show Posts
|
Pages: [1] 2 3 »
|
The author has a direct ownership in the companies listed. Forbes may see that as a conflict of interest (and honestly it is).
Link is dead
|
|
|
Might be a good time to remind people that Bitcoin superdev Peter Todd is working on this coin!
|
|
|
bullish on via the closer to we are to ether release
Can you fill me in on the Ether connection?
|
|
|
I like how this coin is aiming to be the "DOGE" of Crypto-note. Great idea, I just bought my first coins Being "DOGE" of CryptoNote is only a small part of duckNote`s destiny. Oh I know. It's just appealing to me and makes sense to have a "tipping" currency in the CN family Wow this is what I was thinking today... lol Ducknote is pretty awesome. Can anyone explain how it will maintain its CPU only status?
|
|
|
also remember this stellar coin that is coming out which is i beleive endorsed by makers of paypal?
Stellar already come and had it's peak. It was pure pump and dump thing like lot of altcoins which come up. And where did you read that Stellar was project of Paypal owners? I'd like to see more about that. He's talking about how Keith Rabois is on the board of Stellar. But he's also a huge Bitcoin fan as well. Stellar will help transition people to crypto like Bitcoin, so it's not bad at all.
|
|
|
http://fortune.com/2014/07/31/stripe-launches-bitcoin-challenger-gives-it-away-for-free/The San Francisco-based startup, whose technology lets businesses accept online payments, helped introduce a new Bitcoin-like currency on Thursday called “stellar,” as well as a payments network that lets users send any kind of traditional and digital currency including U.S. dollars, pesos, euros and Bitcoins. People will be able to send one kind of currency across the globe and have it automatically converted into another — a sort of all-inclusive online money exchange. WTF? This is a stupid article. They never said it was a bitcoin challenger... it uses bitcoin.
|
|
|
Very cool
|
|
|
Wait... isn't he right?
The plague spread through Europe at a rapid rate... bitcoin will spread through the world at a super rapid rate... except instead of being a dangerous virus - it's something good for mankind.
The weirdest complement?
|
|
|
The reason was on his personal website (taken down recently).
It would sound funny if his wife michel had a last name Bell... Michel Bell - rhymes. So he used his wife's last name.
|
|
|
Just to follow up, today I made my first solo 401K purchase of bitcoins. The 401k plan I chose doesn't require a trustee to manage the bank account - I am the trustee. Many plans require you to use a trustee and they are quite limiting. This will be interesting.
Can you elaborate on what you did? how has it worked out so far?
|
|
|
Was just thinking this today. When I first heard of people being excited about MaidSafeCoin i'm like... W.... T... F... Maid Safe?
|
|
|
Quite irrelevant as he admitted he didn't understand it in the video and simply dismissed it as 'flaky'
|
|
|
I have a hard time understanding how Bitcoin could be taken over very easily. Basically, we have programmers working on the code, and a huge active community of supports, long term holders, and miners. If there is some kind of threat - you'd think everyone would join together and support a fork or layer of innovation over bitcoin?
|
|
|
How is it possible that Bitcoin is a stepping stone, when the code is open source and can change? It's not stuck and frozen in time, it can evolve, right?
wrong... the bitcoin core devs have stated many times they wont change anything unless 100% necessary! so yes bitcoin will stay the way it is unless something comes along and threatens the protocol and demands a change to the protocol! I noticed from this talk ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kIy2Fw9xjuk#t=819) Andreas says basically to paraphrase 'Once Bitcoin goes mainstream … it won't be able to change in 10 years' ... starting at around 21 minutes in the talk However, he says after implementation of anonymous transactions in the core protocol - all other innovation and code should be added to layers above the core protocol
|
|
|
How is it possible that Bitcoin is a stepping stone, when the code is open source and can change? It's not stuck and frozen in time, it can evolve, right?
Bitcoin has a huge advantage, but it is possible for something better to come along. Also, if the Bitcoin Foundation continues to anger enough people, then our movement could (possibly) have an epic split into two or more projects. So you've basically outlined at least one of the projects that major antagonists to Bitcoin would pursue - divide and conquer. Some kind of agent provocateur that discredits the foundation or a few.
|
|
|
How is it possible that Bitcoin is a stepping stone, when the code is open source and can change? It's not stuck and frozen in time, it can evolve, right?
|
|
|
**Clip from Conclusion**
"There is a significant probability (higher than 99% I would guess) that Bitcoin as it is in existence now will disappear from the scene and that some investors will be disappointed. It is mainly the efforts in mining by those who have accumulated BTC stock without selling in between who may loose real money when that happens. The current rate of BTC (around 425 USD while sliding downwards at the time of writing) takes such risks into account. That rate may perhaps be considered a market estimate of exactly that risk."
|
|
|
Yes, the limit is 7 tps now. But, the current situation is, we are not even close to that. You can find that the average block size now is still lower than 300 KB on https://blockr.io/charts while the limit is 1 MB. Very nice site. Its nice to see the total transactions increasing in the past year
|
|
|
almost getting there.
|
|
|
|