Bitcoin Forum
June 30, 2024, 08:21:34 PM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 27.0 [Torrent]
 
  Home Help Search Login Register More  
  Show Posts
Pages: « 1 ... 1682 1683 1684 1685 1686 1687 1688 1689 1690 1691 1692 1693 1694 1695 1696 1697 1698 1699 1700 1701 1702 1703 1704 1705 1706 1707 1708 1709 1710 1711 1712 1713 1714 1715 1716 1717 1718 1719 1720 1721 1722 1723 1724 1725 1726 1727 1728 1729 1730 1731 [1732] 1733 1734 1735 1736 1737 1738 1739 1740 1741 1742 1743 1744 1745 1746 1747 1748 1749 1750 1751 1752 1753 1754 1755 1756 1757 1758 1759 1760 1761 1762 1763 1764 1765 1766 1767 1768 1769 1770 1771 1772 1773 1774 1775 1776 1777 1778 1779 1780 1781 1782 ... 2043 »
34621  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Legalize Marijuana, Illegalize Fissibles on: October 09, 2015, 10:56:03 AM
Don't legalize anything. Rather, repeal all illegalization of everything except:
1. Actual verifiable harming of somebody;
2. Actual verifiable damaging of the property of someone else;
3. The breaking of a clear contract.

Smiley
34622  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: This is why people "despise" Bitcoin on: October 09, 2015, 10:48:18 AM
The two things I see wrong with Bitcoin are...

1. No cash.

2. Because of its nature, Bitcoin plays on the ideas of trust that we have in the way money works. What should be done is that there should be much more advertising about the fact that real trust is involved, even in escrow to some extent.

Fiat is fairly trustworthy in direct transactions. You can trust business because the banks will enforce business to do the right thing in many cases.

Since there is no central bank involved with Bitcoin, there is little method for enforcing trust. Bitcoin tries to overcome this to some extent with escrow transactions. But people are not used to the way Bitcoin handles things. So they jump right in.

Smiley
34623  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Why is there such an insurgence of flat-earthers in 2015? on: October 09, 2015, 10:34:03 AM
The plane of the earth's orbit around the sun is slightly different than the plane of the moon's orbit around the earth. The moon's orbital plane around the earth is off by about 5.1 degrees from the earth's orbital plane around the sun. This is why you see a partial moon eclipse at times.

At other times, the position of the earth in it's orbit around the sun, causes a total lunar eclipse. This is because the moon's orbital plane remains stationary in its position with regard to at least the galactic plane, if not the universal whole.

While this is a little difficult to explain on paper in words, learning the geometry of the actual motions of the earth, moon, and sun shows that the standard understanding of bodies in space is correct.

In other words, flat earth theory in this instance is completely wrong.

Smiley
34624  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Why is there such an insurgence of flat-earthers in 2015? on: October 09, 2015, 10:03:24 AM
Video: BUSTED: Eclipse PROVES Science & NASA Wrong



Crow777 talks about the terms "barely total" or "barely partial" eclipses from SkyandTelescope's page: The Lunar Eclipse Wasn’t Total After All?!.

Video: There is No Lunar Eclipse Tetrad and Blood Moon is Ghoulish Nonsense
You can see the arc is wrong in this one too:



These folks need to say it right out, that the earth doesn't have a diameter 3.7 times that of the moon, but that both diameters are the same. Oh, of course, they can't. Flat earth, you know. The pictures are ridiculous.

Smiley
34625  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Why are standards so poor in the mainstream? on: October 09, 2015, 09:54:05 AM

The mainstream gets the majority bulk of resources pumped into it from humanity yet when you need high standards in whatever area of life you rarely get it from the mainstream, how would you explain why this is?



Please refer to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ILQepXUhJ98

Haha that video was excellently delivered will be using that to link people in future thanks!.

I do hate to think its all one big conspiracy, the reason being is the herd still gets life improvements as we evolve? if the rich elite had their way we'd all be slaves with zero freedom?  I'm looking for other contributing factors as to why the main stream system doesn't provide the best.

George Carlin is right. But he isn't complete. He left out the answers of what to do... at least in a direct manner. In fact, the fact that he could be on stage as popular as he became was that he used the main stream system to be the way he was, the exact system he was speaking against.

The people in the crowd laughed. They enjoyed Carlin's ironic humor. The were sort of like the people of Dresden, Germany, just before the bombing of Dresden in WWII. These people engaged in the attitude of, "Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we may die." And on the morrow they did die.

Basically, in America, Britain, Canada, Australia, and other of the free countries, the reason standards are going lower is that people are looking to government for the answers to their questions and problems, rather than looking to themselves. When something goes wrong, the people take it to the government court rather than bringing their own court in the same courthouse building. Here's what I mean.

The courts are for everyone to use to make their case. The black robed ones aren't the only ones who have the authority. In a direct way, the 9th Amendment (and to a lesser extent the Preamble of the Constitution) allows anyone making a claim to not only bring his a claim, but to also bring in the rules of court. And his rules can state that the black robe can only referee the court, or the claimant will hold him in contempt.

Done correctly, the above works. But people can't do it correctly, because they think the judge is their king's direct representative. Who is their king? Obama, or whatever president is in power at the moment.

The truth of the matter is that all adult people are kings and queens. And until the people realize this and stand up as kings and queens, they are going to be treated as they designate themselves... as paupers. Claims in court - not complaints - are kings/queens disputing with other kings/queens, or with corporations which are the true paupers.

Here's one of the best videos that shows the way to do it - to stand up. You need to be a real MAN (or WOMAN). You need to KNOW that you are the one in authority YOUR court. Listen for the little place in the video where Karl reminds the judge that it is HIS (Karl's) court as he is the one bringing it - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Twn96nj0jfw&index=10&list=PLHrkQxgz0mg6kUBciD-HIvTXByqjcIZ-D. The people don't do this because they are too afraid to stand up as this video shows - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gc11mJGre10.

Again, the answer is simple in its bottom line form. The answer is that the people are kings and queens in this land. But if the kings and queens look to government rather than standing up as kings and queens, they will be treated as they ask to be treated.

Smiley
34626  Other / Off-topic / Re: Money, girls and cars, what's your addiction? on: October 07, 2015, 03:18:02 PM
Life!

But one of these days that may all change.

 Grin
34627  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Can This Super-fast Camera be Used to Crack the Bitcoin Code? on: October 07, 2015, 02:47:53 PM
no offense but that is the dumbest conspiracy theory ive ever heard.  

Copernican Revolution goes back 500 years.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copernican_Revolution

unless you believe the earth DOESNT revolve around the sun, the sun has to be much much more massive than the earth based on the laws of gravity.  That's just common sense.




The Earth is flat, the Moon and Sun orbit above.

EDIT:

We're drifting way off topic here.

However, there are only a few groups that have any real, live access to whatever information comes from the spacecraft and satellites that go up there. All the physics that we have has to do with math and experimentation done on earth... except for the stuff that is privy to the actual groups that send up the satellites, etc.

Since all the physics experiments done on earth have only been done HERE, how do we know that we are NOT missing some great group of factors that change things once we get thousands of miles above the earth? Only the groups that control the telemetry of and the readings from the spacecraft would know. And who knows if they are truthful or complete in their telling of what they know?

In other words, things might be extremely different - even the physics - once we get way out there.

Just a thought.

Smiley
34628  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Nearly half of Americans have no savings on: October 07, 2015, 02:38:12 PM
One of the big problems with money savings is inflation. Even if you earn a small amount of interest on your savings in a bank, inflation reduces the buying power of the money at a far faster rate than interest grows it. Not having savings in the form of money is a good thing.

Savings could be held in something like precious metals. But gold or silver have been manipulated lately to make them impractical. However, the manipulation of silver is a smoke screen. People own way more silver on paper than exists. If they decided to take direct ownership, there would be a run on silver that would be almost as bad as the run on cash if people decided to take all their fiat out of the banks. The price of silver would shoot way up, because of its value in industry.

Probably the best way to hold savings is to own good, fertile land that has water. The disadvantages are the property taxes and insurance. However, if it is held in the form of farm land, and rented out to a local farmer to grow or graze, taxes and insurance become negligible. In a pinch, one could live on the land and grow his own food. This might be the best savings of all.

Smiley
34629  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Can This Super-fast Camera be Used to Crack the Bitcoin Code? on: October 07, 2015, 02:10:56 PM
You have to remember every job, needs a different tool. The camera you mentioned has a processor developed for only one function and that is to process those light images to digital images. The processors created for mining, called ASIC's are 100% developed to solve the complex mathematical calculations for Bitcoin mining and are much better for that job.

So you will have the wrong tool for the job, when you use that processor.

The ASIC(s) would be required to crunch the numbers. A GPU (or maybe another ASIC) would be required to direct the ASIC(s) according to the camera and laser activity. The software, of course, isn't written, yet.

Suppose you had a linear group of characters that was continually changing as it was checked by the ASIC:

Code:
8fluEqLYeFMkD97r366g32zBL6hER88eEJffJ8jNqA7cSKN00I4L9qD1s796R3sX7No8MicLXvjyw0nkb

Now imagine that at the same time this group was being checked, there was another group off each character in this group. The top row in the box, below is the same as the above box.

Code:
8fluEqLYeFMkD97r366g32zBL6hER88eEJffJ8jNqA7cSKN00I4L9qD1s796R3sX7No8MicLXvjyw0nkb
SC71ClOMf3nvVLKw1Gs8fYjjBKeMzg2w1Igv7qEqMDHz1XLrYkCkwDzL8zWGFr2XGaya3iihlIJEyY8Pe
YFpu7dl3dWjjvei0aQOhh4O44HrfcrRQHHB5XbCYpGpyBurooIe1hqeMRoF98h26s4XzC8AE6XGEkLR5Y
FpXUl5AlyP5Gi0ufYRvQU6HeMzOs2lZYo5zb1O4egpnYfkJ6nPyNKa6QGcsSlkLNLJ6Yw8abORRcmY2hs
C2J30pWl56YLX2zBJoUMZHhA0hNchYPoPzW98FOmlZp4NyPcjAodsN4cYYB52sly9FEKWzrWnjYjzNYFc
7yU9VecUM956zZoEMI9HVWcPVXzF3OCipbrjjkgszgMo5Smpepa1VyzchHDjvqwCawm1OGXoRy1mnPuQE
feRldB988KdpYq9bsKWLzECQZUzwSMu6jrQMLCePRNWKbqFop407vNJnvjcOqRyQjhfgIz9zB2JlaMnhH
qgmjzsMzXCMVOSXCuo0Zg8FcyImwggdkqJwZdYShLyczuzjvvgcV1LfILwzkz1QWGfFf6RYfyue4F3Dy0
n24fApsipcByzv9caMwF5G7UYgSiuG8NL3qiYnHhMIzygw3MZXFbcASDkisp9ZPYlQhY31KdpgSNNs72R
p7jBLIoBaWwewXvyjFK5fozX0IBlh4QpVKUrcZBrubsmudSdNwLmaCghmy62JyHyk4jkYsfX7wwoyadF0
WWYCzIc5YeQY6Q2RDLPMjKfLlVpGLLYv1HBJOj2CZpWIdVflAanecP3B2bFfNWSiCVhskrESc129Z6YI9
p2nJyr8Avf50CVqRKyESkK8ePSjCM9Voq9Dk5Fdv48057Rq5ofn6fsKJ02J58CwFKmry1bkPzvmeAz9eI
Ag14bBvGuKYM2ZQ8EzNPMcVgDyzWm50rK8RQZ17of6SJVv57dZQ3HPX8mHao5VGAeDQf5IzV8G37fhXBc
2iY7blJlPsUn3YJFeYigeXyJaz2m6sbswz5MXkqNqcy1zwLrbbJv4aeY8Xo2zPOkkJP030V23VHJQuwd3
73gYXEhWPHqqWOHONg6Z7Kjn5PFgoQ8gzch8EcYWS4MWQMzlJhh0ZUwuzOeID7L5G6A5EUgzG5LWNsi1S
5JQYuGlHmzEUIXSdFMY4cMwyywwuWXUJFWeqOseq65qwpL2C1C6zMiFBcm8D6nCh6VUWuk6EHrYn4X9fE
5ZRmJ8iE09bsC6B5ESLKBYKyDWlyQPPMvKDcULkdanoEga66hPVmeCXzDzzDSMQQI4Ni9aPWJuAQi3ppq
R0c8F4nYiDjLfmgur02bcq8V2eLpiHoueyqsCsESegm8RsJoWd1vOz9iOf3HJHomBEfdzK6X60YwWeo6d
QIV1nlmIEC0DWPOefsGZoUXzmdUJEpcupw7Rf1BREw7ab8vQye1OWKwyEZ8LyJeBvFDU0OyWaaKOmH29e
ZICne8Yjzj9uJePBnDMUoK8qOPpF60YyNg5phEjImvEGYYdsJmQd39Y0vz77wB0y2IYNrGJkza2APaghZ
kGyjvdo7Bq2pQDG8pXG4BrcyPdHe3Liilk8IrcifWEwuadjZKILKkGc11dCEHjHyHaW9NcSeyQ5Ycw34g
v7zb9WAc3Svl0zeRQCVG7zlJSMK2ACq3OzeZpCa2w6i8KdcmnsBSbgyEzX41b5pVLD0Y9eyKSIoX1MHq2
z9LWMRaEhjf48bEWaHwKIRNWfFpdseKdy4h28rn0MBgRYpeVMmMQV7iYOZwYoYGOvqV8zfYwRGjgaBpUk
RFiJeYceIyrJfqKQ6oNjumuEp0PYoQqWZzRWVI737pZSylSz3OB0ASHkPBv7sypedP48bv3mv0p23JwWE
rVAAy3r0EKFZBP5piz4GPp1sFbCW65lWC3FJNf13iXF8DOPLeXclyDlsgWji5cvaImvCn84GrUd3WO5z1
AY3yRkFyqzrDzjvyhVVvIj9OKWv1yCEn1Phzdjr8y8Y3u0wOhYyjPFL67r1MJh6OCpZ7I9ffiLbBaWybv
yDXzrYWd0nmsGVbYbCGCHdLzX3iAyINSYYWRj4qvdzdSDjUWJye9mFkqVKSksQKA4e9v8zbrGmonHoNsl
PzoKXn9meUkdHCSgsnMyDZQRjRWgfyyAAPWdCS1WbpSE6Dmf5y1j6z8aXY2VYlIj7dYn1uDC05s3cew4v
XVAaWMzYf2pff7bdvOyGWiY6SyzgMV5CrYVFO9ye2q2LzSEqh1Oi7qrW0MBwppi4BBXXLJoNM12MsN4SD
KKgaYeWXH0N7l8pe3JzzyQckievdC5byWY2LKyqK1WWgLkYU8lE1NfkZlvFAemRUCy3hWIrYavaPjAdQI
g7s2w5igLGYyLqUvZ3reEhIIoVMw20LmIcGC9wX7gzRUpYdCXOL6W781XOYRCmIqo8FyKLvLoG4URi8Bm
vXQzSIqHUEmjhgoNw97NfuC4uYM2GsZzuzF8hb1WFYHaz5FnVeqXsV1d4EVn02mr0fqHR9cpvBaZ0LfSi
cOW6yKYlHzperePYvf6NCmkEyChUDubJ8zHHHjRyznnRBN1zAvH90DDvYuIQdZYJeGYEJXcYzQ1DzkNQm
PCRkpYgwV3iKi5I7P4Cc2QGzre16GqYVaoyQuFD3z1waFq6IYY7iS8DjaGukZb4dUEf2I1D4w7drfzc3i
Fam0PbeX1AlfuWXLUYPlo7kFzRoiySgq8ss8fCHYwPcJPz0GiWbvDHojVEDwGnp8sS82mRyDUVg5eeJZs
KdVZnElbrpFY3hBX6eEC3K8hHAX4KDv4jZbmrBlnq3HqjQ3MnOLRhXlAnCURIf5UujSNrfYhoCYQhnmvp
LFFi7mlEylB8X9e0aJcpEhDvGl4XKdWyovHYvRbzu1Jy3OlpDYaa0nm1MAnusXJ9HOnGsr9yqNROdzuKN
PDAXV6hYFjgf8LSXJvyvuQYSvch691yNMUiucbZNLqyp29OnKEsapOuUWLOwJwlX06bDd46vBb3Eaa2dQ
sQM6iI2dYeKVbyLsh9op0LnvUGBgBNVPoZYy7pqBDE0zWLmSW4q0hdpyOD2XK6hOM3X5C5drcuHys9w2S
QmMZnmlm9PduWvZgmZf8ZmGMkdH37CGfO5l14AXsseOwRCf9uOZXGvLAhpUnbYHddsEuM6vUaYFqUpW7y
5L8fZhiBOLU2l8rWroWe9fmhZqpq2qAsOWdqYS8FiZDBGz5yp6BnHqWm9Zg2PbWhqj9lKLXRHCylfrYcl
IA0UDAJD8diRKMYyMQdQOuamRfZzWAAD8WgqYhDYcAVcSdyOi1klg9azMF2pY7UHloo3VoW3a0o1B4s9Y
hLLh3MKPir17fXHnGyWzKzjOGKulc1whh4fP3cKSU6SfYVor8mLjyNkU8yn1N2wrJFAV27kEYwVdAzhFz
IOFuAjDiYVkXO67Azy8hOfGGNfXIUPEcBoqbs6fBosUyifIFq0GOkBFEd8bfW5s1ycknu3sQm9chvaaIX
1BqrazLadJynQBHk3YzWYGdLyFHpkFvMBd7mSCunpSV1AYalBpNzBu3bDdHzNc8EWbZQIpyNepXceCebP
DRoc2wSWqKQeswAsK3YzbH56WyZQGSAPyErppjdSwM6JQhG2RMzZ1y9uBmmhyRk6BYyF02fFJbNw7Cosk
7OYld2LUPmavMgdzi13nyz9EPz3YdqPCslKAObNuFVBF9Yreay29DaZ6coqUl1mAr5Mf6a7i9Pru2LmcY
W7szmsa5rJCmpWPvSYmiZmDCBuQjeMki5HIIPrRgLQDaa8r4BE7RCJRYWzObXkAmrl58NBdvrup9zHYXG
u6D2FNwesPFrp4hPVQ52byvpyzDZdSW5Lpw68mNviwrGgc7yf7S8ufBXdluYLMpm4LKLKEs8H9oNjMBdE
Y5izDF3LmUyEarAkCU4hzXoynM4z5zKvRf7qP8errANVA4yeeZBuEBZrC3cKpD6g12zqJVE1yOsciogUn
2pXGX13BPlkgylYChMEFD4M98V5KJYQE4NL332v0C80OJUnjgKznobgJSjB1Ssz9PkIYSURK5N6AMQwIu
5Jbf5DqzFoDlnCys50esKBoznb17OneqNBkLuuC74y8iSRlZ2E3LqWynhz7MyigK4UwJ0z865rab7Nqk9
pcX5plbLaMWs6ayXYNCfo7rB3HpyVfySZi6WoepzfR2QEf2ysQz2cLS3cXjiRNM21uzp7GyDDRDWp5BR8
IRNf6H1BrfbDhHvKGwYsPOmHIj3jaKcG0dQFJpgP6IFGb0YHhnoKu7SCQMsY3AD2F6oW8lhEn5MkzSHI6
oOFfyAycApGc6jNQGhFnEaw7oYOAHf9YCm6hVyFnYgim4vZof9UznWk4D4rAcjG117ougL2I3wLJ6kkZ8
FEyX79i72B0NBwy10a3PIeJahXbGoDy2p6h5XNfkyfmQoPmKVBkomUlszpIodpdhBQAXUvqAjUYsqaUYq
OQnP3HyVz1hSNuhuyqPXB7RvYz8bavLUoLbUy3bySDwjUmhXz9r0LkWnfsV0zqilELMAgKq9LyCVcZ4rR
lkg7Yoonsh46z8uEuoKyGLl9pLUS3opU9opCdWELAYCHc34EHmQ5h1Y1GgIY97k3Z5R15I1Ie1Lk9Zsyd
e7wjnufU6avFYsfYaI5azFfJmLrXBwimOJLEARFAqDgRoyReqyK5WARes5I7k1oRmzlzUYeUC27E4uAEX
mBjeLVu3pw91h0jaugkvuEjARph6zuQn0yYUf5gynfwiXygjOCW1HHnYyyRYwf1SBYFB4A0IHYDr3ze4y
5Bhz2MbA3Jwoz09jyB0CMwdzWIfLXIbrOeUZ4yS88hlzyAM7GCLA0NVzHspBXQ6RIhQfHdNySk56U5pM1
SXRpi9hKWdrYn1vy7cG4vdDuzUczL4NUg2sFnL8XBe2zJof9kuaM9Q9edKjfHLHFSMfy9pgS2IyViBwEk
KjJqgrDw0PhOPcRyS0iEksf833yyVYYd7UYeuohlAfMsQQzArndRm5u0N1u6hHUwh3ZzfHsCk2LRKmYpr
Ccuo3u8nLpJlgzylAkgYIukZy1HrIVY4fEUs5rZbjzAhLnyyM9PsYzlzG0N9KwJkdc2yXD2EYpF9pMLlF
K8biLdjzBGQvAye1Yin9Qw1LWJXz1s65m2ykjzSpk1w59N3cJKFW3fE86875zMYRJAcYBUz5PYEd7dRJR
ULaIdGlNMXYFMaayopRleRdir5QDovOFoYEXZVAPyEDMJBFsulMK4M7yqbvvyV9rDEuFU6j3sypqWf2K1
BnfpPLIdDqUN8d1zUAYzKogwiWLHPIMeJ72KcL9GKej1FrZffppd8qoDkjY9XPkYcKFsf8NHufYbbdHS6
M4RhRYZJwMCAVREYBzV7OF3YNh5nWDSmm7jR4S8gKmPyyc8YcuZQMb8kNfNzBbzsK3C69mHHHloPyks7g
iH89hwDmpzylWJC63ZZWKdPmKVzIfG8PIgwp3yFqY2rHIBCBQizgdA4JuMa5naAr72G6YzPSCjnKbrkCW
kMOOm43YLVO3w7gskmIrlMRdrhyGG41vJywf84S3OaLsXOqkDyoSpu3aY6IeI5Xm2zHyCYU6BPmY2HlO7
3yEGwJuqGHkBzY3YlzYu3FYJy1f7Y3LwnaMORjzsYJy93OQYnr8DuY46M0n37HD7O6k8QoQDoY74FLDlH
FSnrSielPE1zD6ChFn4OiGV84Q7Q4zSrs093SzU1zdfcBWy4J0LF3KLUnKJbQD9ykg6kq5RKqAG8joEdr
2q8mXfzBIsaGfc8cP4Rja1yCSQ4YdokfPGIylo87iKSs5orRY87z91FdXd6Ov0kXseWfcMz61Dcj2cNO9
z2zYVWeQjhLzrsvBLfU07sBEMP2Q9zsr0PYResOfGDq9yNhBUWFe1y6vpY4YOEiSOyUM5OKdzMS6YzzSL
PYCyg6slKSde5VvSjQLIzaszOnrc2yEihbIz8UFYfyRdcOrcamazPpy6caF7KqclbREFv7pBEKzHjUqKz
luVrbIdoaMNEku1MjZqXFKwBWIkoRliUjcbPzDXEfgyyBHhDY9nkvcdUDlLio6U22JlSQKQbHXf6I1dfB
sC6oiOXSnhNnyBOBQYMbYUqjzYFyMrNPmdsZ3fO1H66D3IVL63zlY291vqJF9U85feSM7EdEnquNniiPD
dbwRLJ8Su00lGBkSFhqIIuBbJUiwB4RGOpMgbYfDEspy0Vmr01cNhSNpEZYFAfjFlvjLAru8yfdg6NHDk
pYY25sNmrM295Nq7N0aj8jscHVVEQDLrr53yISEkXzgbrZXoHkAZm2OsLP2vwcj4FHySzGpHhE5qePMN1
n0pKABK6EwYJQzkUEQKsv4v3YW6ydG2eK8orblUj3ClYEzrSk2vMfSz9RQFVGWrKn0qy6bPHfORsqgaOY
HsWLzV2A4np2obqi6zlQ8BMhiO1mpfGrRbEl7yE1vgvruRzIEzpwpwuSprg24iX6Z2riFdZzyfOM4YRqk

The example is for visual purposes. It is not accurate regarding the exact way the programming would work, nor the exact characters that would be in any plane. The example simply depicts a type of programming would be needed to instantly check a whole plane of possibilities, each group branching off each character in the original linear group.

Depending how many depths one would want to go, there could be a planes off each downward linear group above. We would also have the horizontal linears of all the planes involved. Such could be extended as many levels as desired, making several ASICs work together at once using the trick the camera exploited.

I know this is a crude explanation. And I don't have the knowledge for expressing it any better. But the result would be that rather than checking the first batch of 81 characters in the first box above, all of the sets would be able to be checked at once, those in the second box, and any subsequent boxes/levels that the programmers wanted to add off the second box, etc.

The result would be that a present miner could "re-route" his dozens of ASICs, and crack the present encryption in relatively short order as it now stands. Of course, the encryption would be made more difficult to compensate, but there might be a point where complication would become impractical because of the increased size of the numbers of characters being manipulated to keep the blockchain safe.

Then, imagine what it would be like if the system were used in quantum computers.

Smiley
34630  Other / Off-topic / Re: Super fast camera capuring light as it travel! on: October 06, 2015, 06:03:51 PM
This technology was developed in India over a decade or so ago, why is MIT trying to take credit and claiming it's "new"?

EDIT:

oh, and Google has been cleansed of all the old links and only gives links to the new MIT articles. Nice...

EDIT 2:

ok, I found an old video from 2011, it still says it's from MIT but do recall this being even older than that and being developed in India with no mention of MIT.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-fSqFWcb4rE

TED.

Ramesh Raskar presents femto-photography, a new type of imaging so fast it visualizes the world one trillion frames per second, so detailed it shows light itself in motion. This technology may someday be used to build cameras that can look “around” corners or see inside the body without X-rays.

https://www.ted.com/talks/ramesh_raskar_a_camera_that_takes_one_trillion_frames_per_second?language=en


Smiley
34631  Other / Politics & Society / Re: 'Cut pensioner benefits now, they will be dead in 2020 anyway' UK Tory party. on: October 06, 2015, 02:18:02 PM
what's your solution to getting the welfare bill down? child and unemployment benefit are already frozen, tax credits are being cut, housing benefit is capped and still the welfare budget balloons each year. the last coalition government cut 12 billion in welfare over 5 years but total spending is higher than when it came to power with those savings eaten up by the over 65s.

our government is committing national suicide in its pursuit of the grey vote with half the total welfare budget now being spent on pensioners. the elderly have been insulated from the recession by the so-called triple lock whereby their benefits increase in line with earnings, inflation or 2.5%, whichever is higher, the "bedroom tax" is waived for them and winter fuel payments remain non-means tested because to make them fill in forms to get free money is "undignified". you tell me what is to be done.


https://i.imgur.com/AYrExDf.png

The welfare answer is simple. Everybody, and I mean EVERYBODY, quit working and go on welfare.

Smiley
34632  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Can This Super-fast Camera be Used to Crack the Bitcoin Code? on: October 06, 2015, 02:08:33 PM

You are simply in denial. Nobody is talking about breaking any of the laws of nature, the universe, or physics. The idea of a camera that could be made to photograph light waves was an impossibility a decade ago. Now we have it. Why can't we trick nature into breaking the Bitcoin code in a similar way?

Smiley
34633  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Can This Super-fast Camera be Used to Crack the Bitcoin Code? on: October 06, 2015, 02:05:09 PM
Nice camera, but how can this camera can crack bitcoin ?
Processor on camera is designed only to process image, so it can't be used for other jobs even it's very fast.

I still think quantum computer is better to crack bitcoin Roll Eyes

If you had to use the photography process, why not post a plate that had all the encryption characters on it, in front of the camera laser beam, so that the beam could read the characters all at once, and use multiple laser beams to supply planar encryption readouts? A GPU would be used to control the activities of one or more ASICs in undreamed of ways.

Bitcoin technology didn't happen overnight. There are systems and problems that would need to be worked out with this method.

Smiley
34634  Other / Off-topic / Re: If you had a time machine... on: October 06, 2015, 01:58:16 PM
This may not be so funny. Time viewing might have a start in the new, high-speed camera that acts like it can photograph individual waves of light, even faster than light speed.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1201676.msg12615688#msg12615688

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1201676.msg12616523#msg12616523

Smiley
34635  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Can This Super-fast Camera be Used to Crack the Bitcoin Code? on: October 06, 2015, 01:49:12 PM
Interesting. But how would that possibly 'crack the bitcoin code'?

He probably implies that this camera has to have a very strong processor in order to push these frames. Then would this processor be able to crack Bitcoin code as he said?

I don't think this would be able OP, there are much stronger computers out there and even they are not able to crack Bitcoin for 6.5 years.

My thought simply was along the lines of using split laser impulses like the camera does. If similar thinking were used with the super-fast computers, perhaps there is some way to test massive amounts of numbers all at the same time by applying the method for creating a visual image from various angles using reflected light.

I don't have any idea about how to apply this to testing multitudes of random character groups. But there is a process in this whole idea that might be able to be converted by someone who thoroughly knows both the numbers character-testing technique and the camera technique.

Perhaps I shouldn't be saying anything here. If someone listened to my posts, and took the idea to the right people, they just might be able to figure it out.

For example, fast computers simply test one set of characters after another. What if they could test them in such a way that for any given set of characters being tested, an extended set based off each character in the original set could simultaneously be tested, using GPU combined with an ASIC combined with the laser camera process set up for characters rather than photography?

I really don't know what I am aiming for, but I have a feeling that this might be able to be made to work.

Actually, if it can be done, it would be better to do it now than to wait until Bitcoin is the world currency.

Smiley

Of course, part of the reason that this should be done now is so that the same technology can be implemented into the blockchain for future encryption.

We would be getting planar encryption rather than simply linear. Somewhere into the future we could get spacial encryption. And after quantum computers become a household word, we might even go for fourth dimension (time) encryption. Time encryption just might show us how to unravel time, so that we can view into the past when the technique is re-applied to photography.

Smiley
34636  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Can This Super-fast Camera be Used to Crack the Bitcoin Code? on: October 06, 2015, 01:41:51 PM
Interesting. But how would that possibly 'crack the bitcoin code'?

He probably implies that this camera has to have a very strong processor in order to push these frames. Then would this processor be able to crack Bitcoin code as he said?

I don't think this would be able OP, there are much stronger computers out there and even they are not able to crack Bitcoin for 6.5 years.

My thought simply was along the lines of using split laser impulses like the camera does. If similar thinking were used with the super-fast computers, perhaps there is some way to test massive amounts of numbers all at the same time by applying the method for creating a visual image from various angles using reflected light.

I don't have any idea about how to apply this to testing multitudes of random character groups. But there is a process in this whole idea that might be able to be converted by someone who thoroughly knows both the numbers character-testing technique and the camera technique.

Perhaps I shouldn't be saying anything here. If someone listened to my posts, and took the idea to the right people, they just might be able to figure it out.

For example, fast computers simply test one set of characters after another. What if they could test them in such a way that for any given set of characters being tested, an extended set based off each character in the original set could simultaneously be tested, using GPU combined with an ASIC combined with the laser camera process set up for characters rather than photography?

I really don't know what I am aiming for, but I have a feeling that this might be able to be made to work.

Actually, if it can be done, it would be better to do it now than to wait until Bitcoin is the world currency.

Smiley
34637  Other / Off-topic / Re: What Are Your Thoughts On Vegans? Or Going Vegan ? on: October 06, 2015, 12:31:42 PM
Nothing wrong with vegan food as a side-dish for a nice chunk of meat Smiley. A bit more seriously, we are designed to be omnivores. That "omni" thingy includes meat and fat as well. BTW the first and last fully vegan humanoids, the Paranthropus robustus chewed nuts, roots and bulbs and got extinct eventually, while their scavenging cousins the Australopithecus africanus happily turned to our progenitors.

I've seen this chart below been passed around vegan circles saying that we aren't omnivores, any thoughts on the chart since you seem to know some stuff on the matter:



Lots of vegans will try and push this argument, that humans are not technically omnivores. It's complicated, but we know that humans have eaten meat for at least 10,000 years (probably much longer) and our physiology points towards us being omnivorous. It seems silly to say we're not omnivorous, because we can digest vegetables and meat (we have the enzymes present in our gut to break down meat). Just because we don't need meat, doesn't mean we are herbivores/frugivores.

Anyway, I've never thought this argument mattered much, because we know that you CAN survive as a vegan (albeit with a little difficulty). And most intelligent vegans will use another, more compelling argument - The reason, they say, that we shouldn't eat meat is because we know that we don't need it, and we also know that animals are suffering as a result of our meat-eating.

Now personally I think most vegans are shooting themselves in the foot when they try and recruit others, by saying that killing animals is morally wrong. This is because most people won't make such a drastic change to their diet (like many people, I love meat too much to give it up).

What they should be doing, is getting people to eat free-range, outdoor reared animals rather than cheap shitty battery animals. This way, everyone wins - The animals don't suffer and have a happy life, the farmers get paid more, and the consumer gets tastier, healthier meat. If every vegan did this instead of trying to guilt trip everyone into giving up meat, there would be more happy animals in the world.

I guess the vegans would argue that the animal still gets killed at some point in their life even if free range against their will.  Probably in a period of being in their prime also.  Just saying.  Agree on some of the points for sure.

Currently im mostly a pescetarian fwiw but had a chicken burger a month ago  Grin


So the overall feeling here is that the chart is total horsecrap?

Cats eat grass. Yes they do. They are meat eaters, but they eat grass at times for enzymes and phytonutrients. You can vary your diet and still be the kind of being that falls into a specific group... especial if you are a human, and have free will, rather than being controlled by instinct.

Smiley
34638  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Why do you think there is gun violence in the USA? on: October 06, 2015, 12:24:05 PM
The real answer to the violence question is that people are losing morality.

People aren't being trained in peaceful religion any longer. News, kids' cartoons, movies, all kinds of media, project mass violence, thereby training the viewers into violent ways. Training in peace takes a back seat to all this violence, and usually a seat way in the back.

All this violence training is part of the campaign to make some of the people violent. The goal is to get chicken-shit Americans to enact gun control so that guns are removed from Americans. Once this happens, the whole world will fall prey to the militaries of the one-world government people who are trying to take over the world.

When American guns fail from among Americans, the world will become slaves to the Power Elite One-worlders.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1093806.msg12609529#msg12609529

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1093806.msg12601127#msg12601127

There are two kinds of people in this world... those with guns, and those without guns. Guess which group has power and control over the other group.

Smiley
34639  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Can This Super-fast Camera be Used to Crack the Bitcoin Code? on: October 06, 2015, 12:08:16 PM
A new camera developed at MIT can photograph a trillion frames per second. Compare that with a traditional movie camera which takes a mere 24. This new advancement in photographic technology has given scientists the ability to photograph the movement of the fastest thing in the Universe, light. In the video below, you’ll see experimental footage of light photons traveling 600-million-miles-per-hour through water. The actual event occurred in a nano second, but the camera has the ability to slow it down to twenty seconds. For some perspective, according to New York Times writer, John Markoff, “If a bullet were tracked in the same fashion moving through the same fluid, the resulting movie would last three years.”

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1201217.msg12609910#msg12609910

Information: http://magazine.good.is/articles/super-fast-camera-works-at-light-speed?mbid=psocial_wired

The video on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Z8EtlBe8Ts


Smiley
34640  Other / Off-topic / Re: Super fast camera capuring light as it travel! on: October 06, 2015, 12:00:09 PM
I only watched the video once, but my understanding is that that they take advantage of the fact that lasers send out bursts of light. These bursts are super fast, but not as fast as the light travels itself. However, the bursts are similar enough to each other that they can track the first burst at one spot, and track a subsequent burst at a spot directly behind the first burst, and a third burst slightly behind the second, etc.  The result is that there is an appearance of actually watching light travel.

The whole process is a bit of a trick. This trick expanded allows them to time laser bursts that are aimed in different directions to tell where objects are in a room, via the length of time it takes the light to reach a target object from certain angles. Bursts that are reflected off a wall around a corner can be tracked off their reflection in such a way to detect that there is a corner, and a wall that can't be see directly by the camera.

I could be wrong in my understanding. Watch the video.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Z8EtlBe8Ts

Smiley
Pages: « 1 ... 1682 1683 1684 1685 1686 1687 1688 1689 1690 1691 1692 1693 1694 1695 1696 1697 1698 1699 1700 1701 1702 1703 1704 1705 1706 1707 1708 1709 1710 1711 1712 1713 1714 1715 1716 1717 1718 1719 1720 1721 1722 1723 1724 1725 1726 1727 1728 1729 1730 1731 [1732] 1733 1734 1735 1736 1737 1738 1739 1740 1741 1742 1743 1744 1745 1746 1747 1748 1749 1750 1751 1752 1753 1754 1755 1756 1757 1758 1759 1760 1761 1762 1763 1764 1765 1766 1767 1768 1769 1770 1771 1772 1773 1774 1775 1776 1777 1778 1779 1780 1781 1782 ... 2043 »
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!