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441  Bitcoin / Press / Re: [2013-11-30] Video - The True Value of Bitcoin: What You Really Need To Know on: December 07, 2013, 02:33:35 AM
Good video, very articulate. Have just sent this to some friends who are trying to understand bitcoin.
442  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: [CHARITY] Need candidates! on: December 05, 2013, 05:26:15 PM
We are developing a completely decentralised cryptocurrency exchange that uses a proof of work mechanism at its heart to allow people to exchange cryptocurrencies for other cryptocurrencies and also for fiat.

Just like Bitcoin the output of the research and development has to be open source or it cannot work. And once launched, we will not be in charge of this system, again like Bitcoin it will be its own beast. We hope to remain the canonical developers for this system.

You can read our posts about this to the community here:

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=218516.0

And a Coindesk feature on us here:

http://www.coindesk.com/uk-firm-promises-skype-style-bitcoin-exchange/

We are more than happy to meet with members of bitcoindf and go through our designs and research proposals in detail.
443  Economy / Service Discussion / Re: List of UK organisations who take Bitcoin on: December 01, 2013, 08:31:39 AM
Added:

    • Coast Networks (New) – IT support, Sussex.
    • Northern Jewellers Escort Agency (New) – Escort agency accepting Litecoin.
    • Retro Towers (New) – Retro games suppliers, Hertfordshire.
    • Skype English Lessons (New) – English lessons over Skype.
444  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: nio Card - The world's first Bitcoin payment smartcard on Kickstarter on: November 29, 2013, 01:59:08 PM
The reference to 'first' was my verbatim copying of their kickstarter title. ( I'm just the messenger Grin ).

Seems to be a suite of utilities and they have managed to use this to build a Bitcoin hardware wallet.

When speaking to Ben, who I believe is the lead developer there, he said they are about to set up their website and services to allow you to pay them in Bitcoin.
445  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / nio Card - The world's first Bitcoin payment smartcard on Kickstarter on: November 29, 2013, 10:35:25 AM
Being involved in helping a number of UK Bitcoin start-ups I've been approached by bluenio about their nio Card.

They are producing a hardware wallet. I chatted through an overview of the design with one of the developers and it seems a pretty good design and sensible about the cryptographic aspect of doing transactions and exposing private keys.

They are running a kickstarter here:

    http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1459210729/nio-card-a-smart-card-which-upgrades-your-phone-an

If you interested please take a look and show your support.

446  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [ANN][I0C] Resurrection, memory problems and instabilitiy fixed! on: November 29, 2013, 10:24:06 AM
Just noticed its on http://www.cryptocoincharts.info/ too.
447  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: [ANN][I0C] I0coin hardfork DONE, everybody please upgrade to at least 0.8.3-2 on: November 27, 2013, 08:56:12 AM
I0C is now on coinmarketcap.com.
448  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [ANN][I0C] Resurrection, memory problems and instabilitiy fixed! on: November 27, 2013, 08:54:41 AM
I0C is now on coinmarketcap.com.
449  Bitcoin / Press / Re: 2013-11-21 YouTube - Peter Schiff: Bitcoin vs. Gold on: November 25, 2013, 03:13:47 PM
"Bitcoin doesn't have intrinsic value".
Wrong: Bitcoin is the monetisation of proof of work.
I disagree here.  Bitcoin doesn't derive its value from the work.  You can come up with all kinds of useless work, that doesn't give the work a value.  
...

I said: "Bitcoin is the monetisation of proof of work" not: "Bitcoin derives its value from work."

Finding a value, through work, that satisfies the current difficulty chriteria for a given block is valuable because it then grants the finder some bitcoins for that block; these tokens or money can then be used later. Hence the proof of work is monetised into a trantresferable and reusable form. That I would argue is its intrinsic value.
450  Bitcoin / Press / Re: 2013-11-21 YouTube - Peter Schiff: Bitcoin vs. Gold on: November 25, 2013, 01:50:30 PM
"Bitcoin doesn't have intrinsic value".

Wrong: Bitcoin is the monetisation of proof of work.

"Bitcoins can't be used for anything else".

Wrong: Bitcoins are an abstracted form of trustless contract that don't require a third party; money is just one implementation of this.

"Buy my product instead".

No thanks.

He needs to do more research.
451  Bitcoin / Press / Re: 2013-11-22 Money Week Bitcoin: a ‘libertarian Ponzi scheme’ on: November 24, 2013, 06:30:11 PM
Another great peice by Bill. Very articulate and insightful.
452  Bitcoin / Press / 2013-11-22 Money Week - The biggest financial story since gold on: November 23, 2013, 06:34:51 PM
From 20 November 2013 / Issue 667:

Quote
Exciting things are happening! Bitcoin traded over $700 on Monday. The Dow shot over 16,000. And China decided to go even further down the capitalist road.

Don’t know about Bitcoin? “The Department of Justice recognises that many virtual currency systems offer legitimate financial services and have the potential to promote more efficient global commerce,” a Justice Department official told the US Senate. Bitcoin may “hold long-term promise”, said Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke. “If properly regulated,” added an unnamed official.

Publicly, the feds are playing it cool. Privately, they must be sweating. The new virtual money has the potential to destroy the dollar, the Fed, the banks… and the whole world’s monetary system. It could also make gold obsolete. This new money is easier to use and costs nothing to store. Regulate it? That may not be possible. Bitcoin is the most disruptive technology yet invented. It could be the biggest financial story since gold. Nothing like it has happened in 6,000 years – an entirely new kind of money – and better! In fact, it could help bring in a whole new phase of economic development. Watch this space for more details.

Meanwhile, the Dow rose over the 16,000 mark on Monday. But while US stocks could go much higher, there is much more risk on the downside than there is reward on the upside. Corporate profits are largely a mirage – a reflection of the Fed’s red-hot quantitative easing (QE) policy on the barren sand of real revenue growth. The economy is still not recovering. And the Fed’s low rates keep debt growing, which increases the risk to the whole system.

So out of stocks and into Bitcoin? Not so fast. Chinese officials have said they would like to ‘de-Americanise’ the world’s monetary system. Bitcoin may be their best bet. Last week the Middle Kingdom’s rulers met. They decided to lighten up on the ‘one child’ policy. We’re not sure of the details (see pages 10 and 24 for more). But the important thing is that the leadership seems to be turning the whole economy, from capital formation to consumption, and from exports to domestic markets... and from the dollar to alternatives.

We don’t approve of central planning. It always makes things worse. How much worse? It depends. If the central planners fight the markets, things will get very bad. But if they go along with what the markets want to do anyway, they will do less damage. That’s what Paul Volcker did in the early 1980s. Back then inflation rates were headed up over 10%. Bond yields, too, were over 15%. The markets were correcting inflation, with bond yields vaulting ahead of the consumer prices index (CPI). The markets were tightening credit so as to squeeze the CPI. Volcker had a choice. Fight the markets with more cheap credit to maintain full employment, or join them? He declared for the markets. He drove yields higher, over 18%. Inflation rates quickly corrected down to 5% and continued to sink for the next 30 years. America enjoyed its longest period of growth in history.

But things were very different after the crisis of 2008-2009. After almost 30 years of falling yields, the markets were ready for a correction. Too much debt had built up in the private sector. A ‘day of reckoning’ was at hand. First, Bear Stearns. Then Lehman. General Motors. Fannie Mae. Freddie Mac. Like dominoes, big institutions fell into default and bankruptcy. But the feds stepped in. They fought the liquidation. And they succeeded in halting the process of de-leveraging. Bravo? Good work? Ben Bernanke got his mug on the cover of Time magazine. They called him a hero. Not only did he fight the market, he won – at least for a while. We have more debt now than we had then. And the day of reckoning is still ahead.

Meanwhile, the Chinese are loosening up. They’re letting people have more children. Already, retailers are getting ready to sell diapers and strollers when the babies show up, roughly nine months from now. This will boost demand for bigger houses, too. And bigger cars. And more debt! In fact, commentators are talking about a new baby boom – which, like America’s baby boom of the 1946- 1962 period, could transform the whole economy from an export powerhouse into a consumer colossus.

Chinese stocks trade at 15 times earnings. Not super cheap. But if the growth rate of 7% a year continues, they could look like great bargains a few years from now. Chinese stocks? Bitcoin? US stocks? What to do with your money now? Stay tuned.

To read Bill’s daily thoughts, sign up to the Daily Reckoning free email at www.morefrombill.co.uk.

These guys are a great evidence based finance magazine, they were advising people to buy gold in 1999. A bit liberal. Been trying to get them into Bitcoin for ages with little effect.

Occasionally they reply by email and ask a few questions but not often. MoneyWeek has a fairly widely readership in the UK.
453  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Marketplace (Altcoins) / Re: ► ► ► LEALANA PHYSICAL LITECOINS FOR SALE - 1 LTC, 5 LTC, 10 LTC, & 25 LTC on: November 23, 2013, 10:13:10 AM
Another set arrived today. Excellent as ever. My 1s are still in transit, I'm very excited about those. Fell like a kid at Christmas.

I know this has been partially answered in your first post but wanted to get a bit more info:

Looking at the 5s with the overprinted ink serial number on the back, what is the span of those numbers? Have you been issuing the 5s in order? If so starting from what numbers for the singles?

Also looking at the set of 3 coins the 10 ad 25 have laser engraving that matches the 5's ink number. I assume this is always the case for a given set of 3? If so what is the span of those numbers, starting at what value and have the sets been issued in order too?

Is the laser engraving unique to the set of 3 or is it on all the 25s, 10s? Does the lasered serial number ever repeat?

Hope this is not too many questions; I know you're drowning in orders at the moment so I'm happy to be patient if you're going to write this all up at some point anyway.
454  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: Invictus Innovations ProtoShares Cheat Sheet | CPU Mining on: November 22, 2013, 12:22:29 PM
What evidence so far is there that botnets have become involved in protoshare mining?

Aside of theoretical analysis of momentum algorithms what tests have been run on Protoshare to test it is AISC proof?

455  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Altcoin price rally? on: November 22, 2013, 05:53:38 AM
Does anyone know what's behind the current altcoin price rally, particularly coins like NMC?
456  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Namecoin was stillborn, I had to switch off life-support on: November 22, 2013, 12:08:10 AM
Any ideas what's caused the sudden namecoin price spike?
457  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Max Keiser entering the trenches on: November 21, 2013, 01:36:37 AM
Very funny. Love his rants.

Perhaps we can use Max's rants to solve the world energy crisis next Smiley.
458  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Bitcoin and Popular Culture on: November 19, 2013, 07:35:16 PM
Evening No_10. Saw this too the other day in Brighton after you pointed it out.

There is a lot of graffiti around town here. Some of it is very good. Some of it less so.

If anyone else has any examples of Bitcoin in popular culture do post it here. It will be interesting to see it emerge over the coming years.
459  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: Invictus Innovations ProtoShares Cheat Sheet | CPU Mining on: November 19, 2013, 05:14:33 PM
How many coins per block, what is the coin limit if their is one and what is the rate of change of coin generation over time if there is one.

Any sources of info on this would be gratefully received.

Did you read the top post?

It'd been a long night; didn't see it thanks.

How does the stated 1% inflation work?
460  Bitcoin / Press / Re: 2013-11-18 -- CSPAN ch.3 - United States Senate Hearing on Digital Currencies on: November 19, 2013, 02:12:43 AM
I like Jerry Brito. He conveys some important points very eloquently.

Same here. this is the kind of person we need representing bitcoin, for obvious reasons.

One of my favourite academics when I was at university was a risk management expert, he dealt in statistically grounded facts about the risks of energy production - covering both nuclear and alternative energy sources.

As a result he was the least popular person in the room at government conferences as neither the environmentalists nor the nuclear industry like what he had to say. But I relay respected the guy as he was a great scientist.

Jerry Brito kind of reminds me of him, but so far he doesn't seem to have said anything that may upset crypto-fanatics (or the US government). Lets hope they keep him on-board for more senate hearings.

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