YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED HOURS AGO BULLTARDFOOLS!
LOLOLOLOL Your shtick is getting old Trollzie. Everyone's laughing at you, not your pathetic jokes. Now back to bed for real. Just had to get some lawls in first.
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Page 11337?
Not quite the same as 1337 but I was here for that too.
I see we had a foolish 12k dump on Finex that dropped the price about 1%. LOL
Back to bed.
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In the last 3 weeks bitcoins have traded below $200 exactly zero days.
In the same time period they have traded above $280 on 2 days, and above $260 on 4 days.
In that time span they have dipped below $220 on 8 days and gone above $230 on 16 separate days.
These are the facts.
Delusional beartards ignore these facts when they foolishly suggest that Bitcoin prices will head lower.
Best to ignore them.
Long term, the price of bitcoins has risen spectacularly. Short term it has made modest but substantial gains.
Only in the narrow range of the last year or so has it decreased in price.
Don't fall prey to the unscrupulous lowlifes that will try anything to coerce inexperienced coinholders into selling below fair value.
They are just opportunistic parasites looking to buy cheap.
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Only bitcoiners consider bubble/P&D cycles as "natural behaviour and growth of a promising investment".
Only Trader cultists compare Bitcoin to stocks, penny or otherwise. I don't see why not. It's an asset that can be traded and is subject to supply/demand dynamics like any other asset. Every chart tells you a story, and the all time bitcoin chart and his bubble cycles tell you something ugly. I suppose if you treat Bitcoin as a mere asset, it's easy to think of it as some kind of tradeable commodity, rather than disruptive technology. Bitcoin the disruptive technology is much more than bitcoins, the commodity though. If Bitcoin were an enterprise, its IPO would still be years away. Of course the charts look ugly compared established commodities like metals, agricultural products or foreign currencies, or publicly traded shares of the kind of established businesses whose shares are already traded on exchanges. The wild "bubble"-like price fluctuations are typical of new enterprises still in the domain of angels and VCs. By the time most new endeavors reach the point of public offerings, the bumps have been smoothed out.
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Only bitcoiners consider bubble/P&D cycles as "natural behaviour and growth of a promising investment".
Only Trader cultists compare Bitcoin to stocks, penny or otherwise.
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100 bitcoins. Will I be a millionaire by 2020?
Probably. Mind you, a million bucks doesn't go very far these days. A crappy little condo in downtown Toronto costs more than that.
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NotLambchop: Why do you waste your time and other's time here? What are your motivations? Saving people from buying bitcoin?
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Unless $23K is an insignificant amount for you, no you will not. You are over invested and will be emotional on price movements. If price falls 80% will you panic sell? If you double your money one year and then it falls back to your original investment amount the following year will you still hold?
Don't worry, it's all profit for me. I bought in originally at $1 and again at $7 and $13 and made enough money to buy my house. I've 100btc left and just want to retire. I'm sick of my job.
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LOL No.... Eastern Standard, Toronto time.
I used to play music in bar bands back in the 1960's, '70s and '80s. Didn't finish work until after 2:00 AM so by the time I relaxed and ate, bedtime was 4:00 or 5:00AM.
After enough time the old biological clock got reset to a noon rising.
Even though the old 6-nights-and-a-matinee business dried up in the mid-1980s (may as well be talking about vaudeville!) my old sleeping habits remain.
I still wake up spontaneously at the crack of noon.
Why so surprised? I was born in the 1940s. I guess around here that makes me ancient. We still had horses pulling the coal, ice, bread and milk wagons. No TV, just floor model radios with humongous field coils on the loudspeakers. Built my first transistor radio in the 1958. Saw my first computer in 1960-1 at the University of Western Ontario. It was an IBM 650 with revolving magnetic drum memory, vacuum tube logic, punch-card I/O and a monitor consisting of an array of neon indicator lights showing the state of all the flipflops (Eccles-Jordan circuits). Programming was done with patch cords. Heard about the new-fangled transistorized models with "solid-state" core memory consisting of ferrite rings on a matrix of crisscrossed wires. Still magnetic, but no moving parts! Got a tour of the Artificial Intelligence Center at Stanford University in 1968, where my brother worked at the Linear Accelerator Corporation while taking his post-graduate studies as part of the "brain drain" from Canada that helped build Silicon Valley. He's still proud to have graded Vint Cerf's undergraduate calculus paper. It was there I first saw a qwerty keyboard and CRT monitor connected to a computer (DEC PDP-1, I believe). Yes, I did get to try Steve Russell's "Spacewar!". Needless to say, I'm still a hardcore geek as well as a hard-partying rock&roller. I still play semi-regularly with several bands. It helps me to get hit on by women 20 years my junior. Use it or lose it.
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Ahh ok lol were the opposite, I'm used to waking up at 4am 4am rising? We used to call that farmer's hours. 7am? That's past my bedtime. Must be in bed before dawn Some of us used to consider eastern sunlight to be carcinogenic. Something to do with Doppler effect.
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Good morning Bitcoinland. Missed a short-lived bump up soon after my bedtime I see. Dropped almost as fast. We're still up on the day so far though, so we'll take it. Mmmm. Coffee. Wild guess, are you in Hawaii time zone? LOL No.... Eastern Standard, Toronto time. I used to play music in bar bands back in the 1960's, '70s and '80s. Didn't finish work until after 2:00 AM so by the time I relaxed and ate, bedtime was 4:00 or 5:00AM. After enough time the old biological clock got reset to a noon rising. Even though the old 6-nights-and-a-matinee business dried up in the mid-1980s (may as well be talking about vaudeville!) my old sleeping habits remain. I still wake up spontaneously at the crack of noon.
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Good morning Bitcoinland. Missed a short-lived bump up soon after my bedtime I see. Dropped almost as fast. We're still up on the day so far though, so we'll take it. Mmmm. Coffee.
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---
...You need to troll harder Yep. He's pretty flaccid.
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Friend on Wall Street says pump to ~250 today or tomorrow. Then it will drop to around 230 and stick there for a bit.
My neighbor says the great rally of 2015 will push bitcoin to $700. The rally won't even START until 700. And the CCMF won't start until $1400. Everything below 5 digits is dirt cheap, right? No. Everything over 1 digit is overpriced, right?
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Friend on Wall Street says pump to ~250 today or tomorrow. Then it will drop to around 230 and stick there for a bit.
My neighbor says the great rally of 2015 will push bitcoin to $700. The rally won't even START until 700. And the CCMF won't start until $1400.
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Good morning Bitcoinland.
It's nice to see we took back what we lost yesterday on that foolish failed manipulation dump.
Glad I bought the dip.
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Good morning Bitcoinland.
Just got back from buying a couple more coins after the failed manipulation dump shortly after waking.
Missed the last dip because it was on a Sunday. This makes up for it.
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Good morning Bitcoinland.
Nice to see we kept most of yesterday's gains overnight.
The week-long bear trap hasn't finished closing yet though.
Nothing that a few million dollars well-spent wouldn't cure.
Luckily there are many more dollars than bitcoins.
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