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561  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: A survey for my Future bitcoin store on: May 01, 2011, 12:45:55 AM
Also do you think there is a lack of bitcoin only stores out there?

Absolutely! There are so many markets that bitcoin hasn't yet covered. Food and produce being the most notable.
562  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Should bitcoin wiki allow links to christian religious services? on: April 30, 2011, 10:58:45 AM
I still can't tell if you are serious.

Obvious parody is obvious.
563  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Attack of the miners on: April 30, 2011, 09:06:11 AM
The Bitcoin price is getting ridiculous, I'm expecting a metric f*** ton of new miners joining within the next weeks.

Yeah... count me among them. I just dropped a good wad of USD on a dual 6990 machine. Should be arriving sometime in the middle of next week. Wonder where the difficulty's going to go from there?
564  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Disadvantages of Bitcoin why price might drop. on: April 29, 2011, 10:45:30 PM
WHAT IF THE WORLD BLOWS UP!!!! Sad

+1.   Cheesy
565  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Introducing bitcoinID and bitcoinID.com on: April 29, 2011, 10:44:41 PM
Awesome! I'll have to see about getting that integrated with Bitcoin Pouch.
566  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Disadvantages of Bitcoin why price might drop. on: April 29, 2011, 10:07:51 PM
1. If you trade in bitcoins you still have to find a buyer of them if you want a pizza.  Thus you will have to use a service to exchange your money to dollars on their terms.  If you drive to a bitcoin meet-up you are still wasting gas to do the exchange.  You will have a middleman more often.
As BitterTea mentioned, this is just a problem for the early adopters. The problem goes away the more vendors start accepting bitcoins directly. I don't think the bitcoin system was ever meant to operate with a middleman forever!

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2. There is a risk of lost, stolen, or disk failure wallets.  Yes you can lose your wallet in real life, but you usually find it under the bed. 
Encryption, backing up, etc. Put a copy on a flash drive, then you can find it under your bed right next to your leather one. There's also the option of using a bank, which I'm sure will become a much more attractive option the more time our current banks have to mature and new banks have to pop up. Heck, I've already begun the testing stages of a community bank of my own that bests MyBitcoin and Instant Wallet in certain regards (though, admittedly not others.)

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3. Shops are slow in adjusting prices, if the price rises and their store might have prices that are 2 months old and they seem expensive.   What if prices crash 90% will the shop honor the price?  I doubt it they buy all their materials in USD, CAD, RUB, or EUD.
Yeah. We sure could use a service that automatically adjusts a person's prices for them based on the Mt. Gox exchange rate. (I'm pretty sure MyBitcoin's shopping cart interface does exactly that.)

I feel like this would be more of a problem for places like Bidding Pond. On the other hand, Bidding Pond could act as a price stabilizer of sorts if it gets big enough. After all, if prices keep fluctuating too much either the fluctuation will have to go or those lengthy auctions will.

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4. There is no record of exchange.  What if you buy a car and you go to pick it up and there is no car or address?  You are out 10,000 BTC.  If you buy something over the internet even for 1 BTC, if they don't send it you are out of luck.
BitterTea covered this one pretty well.

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5. The churning of your hard-drive is already annoying to run the bitcoin client.  If the economy gets 10x bigger that churning is going to be 10x bigger.  Are there any stats to Mb per day you waste on hard disk space?  What about bandwidth?
Ultra-lightweight and light-weight clients. Also, banks. Your hard drive does absolutely no churning when there's a bank churning for you!

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6. In the end you might have to end up using a bitcoin bank anyways where you store your bitcoins to take the risk out of lost wallets.  Then you run the risk that the goldsmiths, take your money and spend it loans and blow.
Okay, what BitterTea said, plus: I'm starting a community run bank! It's called Bitcoin Pouch! Right now it's only running on testnet so people can play around with it using fake bitcoins and not have to worry about losing them, but once it's in production I intend to run it under a system of communal governance and accountability. Haven't decided on a model yet. Thinking about having audits every once in a while to prove all the bitcoins are still there. Maybe an annual Run on the Bank event, where everyone withdraws their bitcoins all at once? Seriously, if you insist on complete openness, there's no reason banksters ever need arise again. They'll try, but hey: vigilance and freedom are positively correlated. Wink

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7. There is always the risk of someone destroying the network or finding a flaw and taking the system down.  Since BTC could be used for money laundering, it might be a big goal of the governments of the world to take it down.
Yup. That might hurt the price. Then again it might help it. No telling what actions might be taken and what effect those actions might have. But one thing I do know: taking down the Bitcoin Network (the Bitnet?) will be about as hard as taking down the Internet or, if we're feeling a little less grandiose, BitTorrent.

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8. What if people stopped mining BTC, or the euphoria of a deflationary currency would people lose interest in it?
Yeah. If everyone in the Bitcoin Community were to give the currency a vote of no confidence and walk away for good, THAT would kill bitcoins dead. Okay, do you know what that means? We have created the first truly free and democratic system of currency ever. So... if you were to tell me you think every person in the community is capable of simply walking away from this, well, I'd kinda look at you funny and say I disagreed. Because really, it wouldn't just take the miners giving up. If the miners give up, then the difficulty plunges and we're back to where CPU mining is profitable. The folks who still believe in it will keep that going as best they can. Everyone would have to leave. Or perhaps everyone but two, since a currency needs three people using it to be useful.

This is not a very likely scenario. But hey, maybe that's just me and BitterTea.

</rant>
567  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Bitkarma on: April 29, 2011, 07:52:50 AM
Umm... what would be the point of this?
568  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Introducing bitcoinID and bitcoinID.com on: April 29, 2011, 07:50:57 AM
Yeah, turning bitcoinID into an OpenID provider might not be a bad idea. It could supplement the JSON-RPC API I hope you're planning on building on top of it...  Wink
569  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Is this a viable idea? Transponder+bitcoin for quick drive-through transactions on: April 29, 2011, 07:48:40 AM
A twist on the idea: the transponder in the car could have a small screen to display a price, along with a button to pay and a button to decline payment. When the order is finalized, a radio signal sends the price to the car, along with the bitcoin address to send the bitcoins to. The screen displays the price and the driver must press "accept" to send the funds. A little less automatic than your idea, but certainly faster than what we presently have. Not sure if it would be worth the cost, though...
570  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Satoshi Disappear Day on: April 29, 2011, 05:37:58 AM
I propose

January 3rd to be Genesis Block Celebration Day


https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Genesis_block


+1

Though I still think there should be a Satoshi Disappearance Day as well. After all, that was the day the project was proven to be self-sustaining. Satoshi planted the seed and watered it. Day by day it grew into a tree, so to speak, and no longer needed watering.
571  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Bitcoin Pouch: A Community Driven Bitcoin Service (w/ JS-Remote!) on: April 29, 2011, 05:03:13 AM
Okay, all the bugs mentioned here have been fixed. I was unable to duplicate the error you had though, BitterTea. It might have had something to do with the upgrade to bitcoind 0.3.21. I downgraded back to bitcoind 0.3.20 because 0.3.21 hung on my server and things seem to be working. I created a new account and was assigned a new bitcoin address as I should have been. One odd thing though: the welcome e-mails with the confirmation codes weren't being sent out, so I'm not really sure how anyone was able to complete registration at all... :-/

At any rate, you can now use the js-remote on the Bitcoin Pouch website if you like, or, if you have Chrome, you can enter your Bitcoin Pouch login information and the Bitcoin Pouch bitcoind API URL (https://bitcoinpouch.com/api/bitcoind/) into the js-remote demo website and that should work. (Firefox is still having problems with allowing that particular maneuver. I keep getting a 400 error from the OPTIONS request it tries to send out. Not sure why yet. Wasn't able to test in IE as the only version I have is 9 and js-remote apparently doesn't work in it.)
572  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Bitcoin Pouch: A Community Driven Bitcoin Service (w/ JS-Remote!) on: April 27, 2011, 11:54:42 PM
Hmm, I think I can integrate this service somehow into the chrome extension.  Smiley

That would be awesome. :-)

I typed getbalance into the console and it gave me an error though.  Undecided

Hrm. Okay, thanks for the bug report. I'll get on that ASAP.
573  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Bitcoin Pouch: A Community Driven Bitcoin Service (w/ JS-Remote!) on: April 27, 2011, 11:53:28 PM
One thing I'd recommend is adding some OpenID buttons, like here. I was really confused at first because I'd never had to know the long Google OpenID authorization url.

Thanks! I'll definitely put that up as a task.

Also, I had to manually call jsonrpc.getnewaddress() in order to populate an address in my profile. Is that normal?

No. I thought at least that part of things was working. Apparently not...

Other than that, I very much like this, good job!

Thanks! :-)
574  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Introducing bitcoinID and bitcoinID.com on: April 27, 2011, 10:09:16 PM
You've got a hardon for OTC-WOT, every new service notice has a post from you asking about WOT integration.

Eh. I like that it's a good, well-established, working solution that lends itself nicely to being worked into just about any ratings service as a backend. Unless someone's got a better system, I'd like to see it used more widely. While the anonymity of bitcoins is nice, I think one of the hurdles to widespread adoption is the lack of a common trust system. The average consumer still gets a bit of nagging worry in the back of their mind when they buy things online, sight unseen, from an untrusted source.

Edit:
bitcoinID is complimentary to OTC and bitcoinKarma.  bitcoinID is all about establishing the physical identity of an individual or organization.

+1. I respect the hell out of that. I guess I just assumed your next step would be trying to integrate a rating system. Kudos for having a focus and sticking with it. :-)
575  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Bitcoin Pouch: A Community Driven Bitcoin Service (w/ JS-Remote!) on: April 27, 2011, 10:02:03 PM
Crashed it at signup...

Yeah, I was having some trouble getting the MySQL server to start up correctly a little while ago. I guess some of the tables still needed to be checked and repaired. Shouldn't give you any more trouble now, though.

Is the account information and stuff sent over to your server as https?

Yes! In fact, I've set up a Rewrite directive so Apache forces all non-SSL attempts at connections to connect via SSL. There is no other way of connecting to Bitcoin Pouch. :-)
576  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Bitcoin Pouch: A Community Driven Bitcoin Service (w/ JS-Remote!) on: April 27, 2011, 05:22:19 PM
Interesting project!

Thanks!

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Can you elaborate on the JSON-RPC interface you provide? This runs on a single Bitcoin wallet but isolates different Bitcoin Pouch accounts from each other? How exactly do you achieve that?

Basically the interface works as a proxy to bitcoind's JSON-RPC interface. Every address created by a user is associated with that user's account and stored in a MySQL database. Also, every address created is given a label: the user's username if they don't specify a label, or a label in the format of "username:label" "username+label" if they do. Before the interface returns any information on a user's own account, it strips the user's username and the extra colon addition symbol. This works because colons addition symbols are not allowed in a user's username. Any calls to aggregate accounts (such as "getbalance" with parameters omitted) is handled by retrieving all the user's addresses from the MySQL database, making the appropriate call to the bitcoind server on each account, and then folding the results together.

The upswing of this naming scheme, aside from keeping accounts effectively separated, is that bitcoins can be sent from user to user on Bitcoin Pouch using only the user's username, or their username and a label if you want the coins to go to a specific account. For example, say I have an address which I've assigned the label of "donations." If you wanted to send bitcoins to that particular address via Bitcoin Pouch, you could simply specify "ryepdx:donations" "ryepdx+donations" instead of the full bitcoin address.

Edit:
Changed references to colons into addition symbols instead. Colons were used in a previous version of the code, which led to my confusion.
577  Bitcoin / Project Development / Bitcoin Pouch: A Community Driven Bitcoin Service (w/ JS-Remote!) on: April 27, 2011, 09:31:00 AM
Hey guys, I've finished the project I've been working on! Well, the first part anyway.

Bitcoin Pouch is meant to be an open-source, community driven financial service similar to My Bitcoin. I'm hoping to run it under a model of governance that will ensure direct accountability to the website's users and complete openness of process. I want this to be community-owned and run. I started this project because I felt like something like this could be a great boon for the Bitcoin community.

There remains a lot to be done, but for now it's ready to be tested. I've got it up and running alongside a bitcoin daemon on testnet. Could you all go kick the tires a bit and let me know if you find any bugs or vulnerabilities, or if you have any suggestions for new features? (Note that while the website remains in alpha testing, any accounts you create there may end up getting deleted at some point before the full production launch.)

URL: https://bitcoinpouch.com/
Source: https://github.com/ryepdx/bitcoin-pouch

Let me know what you think.

Thanks!

Edit:
An important note I forgot: Bitcoin Pouch provides a JSON-RPC interface similar to the one the bitcoin client provides. An interactive client and method list is available once you've logged in to Bitcoin Pouch at https://bitcoinpouch.com/api/bitcoind/browse. The interface itself resides at https://bitcoinpouch.com/api/bitcoind/. At present it's not working with cross-domain calls. You can verify this by entering the interface's URL and your Bitcoin Pouch login information in the js-remote demo at http://bitcoincharts.com/js-remote/. If anyone wants to help with the project, that would be a great place to start.
578  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Introducing bitcoinID and bitcoinID.com on: April 27, 2011, 08:37:39 AM
Hmm... looks like you're barking up a similar tree as the proposed Bitcoin Karma project. You're working on the same problem, at any rate. Any plans to integrate OTC ratings, or some other kind of rating system?

Looks nice though. I like it so far. :-)
579  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Bitcoin market price monitor on: April 22, 2011, 10:54:11 PM
I've added some new query capabilities to the JSON data side of this...

I get an error on the last two of those links.  Undecided
580  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: New to bitcoin/mining - Limited to one GPU? on: April 21, 2011, 04:24:50 AM
I'm not sure, but I think Diablo Miner handles multiple GPUs automatically. Can't confirm it myself, though. Sorry.
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