Bitcoin Forum
May 26, 2024, 12:35:48 AM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 27.0 [Torrent]
 
  Home Help Search Login Register More  
  Show Posts
Pages: « 1 2 3 [4]
61  Economy / Service Announcements / Re: CoinAd - Free Coins every single day. on: May 21, 2012, 04:38:22 PM
sounds like a pyramid scheme to me :/

Ummmmmm... no.  CoinAd is legit.  He pays people to visit his site and look at advertising.  People (like me) pay him to put ads on his site.  People like you get paid to look at that advertising.  Hopefully you'll find an ad interesting and click on it.  No pyramid, no scam, just a good idea that seems to be working very well so far.
62  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: Where do you see bit coin in the next 2 - 6 months on: May 18, 2012, 05:24:50 PM
I've been watching it passively for a very long time now and watched it go from ~$20/BTC down to ~$5/BTC and it's stayed there for quite a while, so it seems like it's going to remain in the $4-6 range for the foreseeable future--unless a large online merchant (not even the Amazon or Steams of the world, even a smaller group like GOG.com or GamersGate would be enough to catapult the value sky high) starts accepting them.

Probably.  The boom to $30+ prices in June of last year was mostly because of the exposure from the Wired article about Silk Road.  The bust in August was just a market correction.  If you ignore that when looking at the price since Bitcoin first appeared, the increase to the current price over time is slow and steady.  That trend is very likely going to continue unless something else happens that puts another run on the supply of Bitcoins.
63  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: Where do you see bit coin in the next 2 - 6 months on: May 17, 2012, 04:29:33 PM
I see it the same place it is now... not in my wallet.  Grin
64  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: New Bitcoin Raffle - tickets are 0.10 BTC on: May 17, 2012, 03:43:08 PM
Your sendto address is a hyperlink that jumps you to the blockchain.info  This makes it inconvenient for us copy&paste people.  Not a big deal.  Hurry up everyone, I've got that 35th ticket already spent Wink

Thanks for the feedback.  I changed it a bit to make the address more obvious and easier to copy & paste.
65  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: New Bitcoin Raffle - tickets are 0.10 BTC on: May 16, 2012, 08:32:48 PM
Only 67 66 65 tickets left at 0.10 BTC each!

Our next drawing will have an even lower ticket price  Grin  
66  Other / Off-topic / Re: Let's Count to 21 Million with Images on: May 14, 2012, 05:35:12 PM
67  Economy / Service Announcements / Re: CoinAd - Free Coins every single day. on: May 14, 2012, 02:33:21 PM
Is pay per impression permanently disabled?  Undecided
68  Economy / Gambling / Re: New Bitcoin Raffle - tickets are 0.10 BTC - 10 BTC payout on: May 14, 2012, 02:30:56 PM
68 tickets left in the current drawing!
69  Economy / Gambling / 50/50 Bitcoin Raffle for charity - tickets are now 0.01 BTC - 20 BTC total prize on: May 09, 2012, 03:50:43 PM
Hello Fellow Bitcoin Addicts,

I've started a Bitcoin raffle service similar to BitLotto (no affiliation), but with cheaper tickets (0.10 BTC), more frequent draws (as soon as 100 tickets are sold), and with smaller payouts (10 BTC to start).

The first raffle will be for at least 10 BTC.  I say at least 10 BTC, because the drawing will be held at midnight (UTC) on the day the prize pool reaches 10 BTC.  Tickets are 0.10 BTC each, so 100 tickets need to be sold to meet the minimum prize pool. All transactions posted before midnight (UTC) on that day will be counted in the drawing, so the prize could likely be more than 10 BTC.  I'm keeping the ticket price low so it's easier for people new to Bitcoin to participate.

I will only be keeping 0.5% of the take to help with overhead, so the payout will be 99.5% of whatever is collected.  So on a 10 BTC prize pool, I will make a whopping 0.05 BTC.  So you can see I'm definitely not in this for the money, I'm doing it for fun and to help promote Bitcoin.  

I've taken some steps to ensure the system is cheat-proof.  Each ticket is made up of the following data elements:

  • Daily3 mid-day numbers from MichiganLottery.com from the day the prize pool minimum is met
  • Bitcoin transaction hash that sent the payment
  • number 0001 thru number of tickets you purchased (if you sent 3x the ticket price, your tickets would be: 0001, 0002, 0003)
  • The first Bitcoin block number with a timestamp after midnight on the day the prize pool minimum is met

SHA256 hashes are calculated for the data string (made up of the four elements listed above) for each ticket sold, then sorted (0-9,A-Z). The winner is the ticket at the top of the list.

The transactions/tickets for the first draw can easily be viewed using the Bitcion Block Explorer at http://blockexplorer.com/address/1Hxjf7yzS8C5obUBcVKxFNSFVCeaVhmTeA

Still, I know this will require some level of trust.  That's another reason why I'm keeping the ticket price and prize fairly small right now.  I want people to see that it will actually work and they are not being lied to.  

I think it will be fun.  I hope some of you will try it out!

http://bitcoinraffle.co/
70  Economy / Service Announcements / Re: CoinAd - Free Coins every single day. on: May 09, 2012, 03:02:02 PM
That would be perfect.  =)
71  Economy / Service Announcements / Re: CoinAd - Free Coins every single day. on: May 09, 2012, 01:26:20 AM
A "forgot your username/password" form would be nice for us boneheads who drank too much last night.
72  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: os x problems on: May 09, 2012, 01:23:32 AM
Any ideas?

What version of OS X are you running?  I had the same problem, but it worked after I upgraded to Snow Leopard.
73  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: Whitelist Requests (Want out of here?) on: May 08, 2012, 07:29:35 PM
Hello,

I would really like to be able to post in the Marketplace forum.  My site is legit, and so am I.  Email/PM me if you have questions or concerns.

Thanks
74  Economy / Service Announcements / Re: CoinAd - Free Coins every single day. on: May 08, 2012, 07:26:58 PM
Hey CoinAd,

Thanks for the gift.   Smiley

75  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: New Bitcoin Raffle - tickets are 0.10 BTC on: May 08, 2012, 03:55:06 PM
It costs too much!
0.01 would work...

Sorry.  I figured 0.10 was low enough for most people, but I guess if you're brand new to Bitcoin even that much seems like a lot. 

I could lower the price and give people who already bought tickets 10x the number they originally bought, but I'd rather not change the rules after I've already sold tickets.  It just doesn't seem honest. 

I'll consider lowering the price for the next raffle if enough people ask for it. 

Perhaps you could team up with other people to pool your money...?  I don't have any built-in support for automatic ticket pools yet, but that wouldn't stop people from doing it on their own.
76  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: New Bitcoin Raffle - tickets are 0.10 BTC on: May 08, 2012, 03:25:32 PM
Thanks.  There is a warning about that on the site. 

77  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: New Bitcoin Raffle - tickets are 0.10 BTC on: May 07, 2012, 11:47:10 PM
I did see RaffleBit and CoinRaffle, but they didn't do what I had in mind.  Yours definitely does, except for only happening once a month with very large prizes.  Either way, I'm just excited more people are using Bitcoin.

By the way... I put a link to your lotto on my front page.





78  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: New Bitcoin Raffle - tickets are 0.10 BTC on: May 07, 2012, 10:53:08 PM
Wow.  I honestly don't know what to say.  I just thought about this yesterday and decided to implement it. 

I'd be happy to put a link to your lotto site and mention the considerably higher payouts.

My idea was to have raffles as often as every day if possible, but obviously it needs to be more popular first. 

Thanks for the tip on from addresses.  Perhaps using the transaction hash would make more sense?  Is that what you use?
79  Other / Beginners & Help / 50/50 Bitcoin Raffle - tickets are 0.01 BTC - (50% to winner / 50% to charity) on: May 07, 2012, 09:14:06 PM
Hello Fellow Bitcoin Addicts,

I've been using Bitcoin for a little over two years, almost exclusively for personal purchases.  

I've decided to do a side project for fun to help promote Bitcoin at http://bitcoinraffle.co/.  The idea is to give others a chance to easily get their hands on some Bitcoin without having to install any malware, fill out endless surveys, or max out their GPU trying to mine their own coins.    

The first raffle will be for at least 10 BTC.  I say at least 10 BTC, because the drawing will be held at midnight (UTC) on the day the prize pool reaches 10 BTC.  Tickets are 0.10 BTC each, so 100 tickets need to be sold to meet the minimum prize pool. All transactions posted before midnight (UTC) on that day will be counted in the drawing, so the prize could likely be more than 10 BTC.  I'm keeping the ticket price low so it's easier for people new to Bitcoin to participate.

I will only keeping 0.5% of the take to help with overhead, so they payout will be 99.5% of whatever is collected.  So on a 10 BTC prize pool, I will make a whopping 0.05 BTC.  So you can see I'm not in this for the money, I'm doing it for fun and to help promote Bitcoin.  

I've taken some steps to ensure the system is cheat-proof.  Each ticket is made up of the following data elements:

Daily3 mid-day numbers from MichiganLottery.com from the day the prize pool minimum is met
Bitcoin address that sent the payment
number 0001 thru number of tickets you purchased (if you sent 3x the ticket price, your tickets would be: 0001, 0002, 0003)
The first Bitcoin block number with a timestamp after midnight on the day the prize pool minimum is met

SHA256 hashes are calculated for the data string (made up of the four elements listed above) for each ticket sold, then sorted (0-9,A-Z). The winner is the ticket at the top of the list.

The transactions/tickets can easily be viewed using the Bitcion Block Explorer at http://blockexplorer.com/address/1Hxjf7yzS8C5obUBcVKxFNSFVCeaVhmTeA

Still, I know this will require some level of trust.  That's another reason why I'm keeping the ticket price and prize fairly small right now.  I want people to see that it will actually work and they are not being lied to.  

I think it will be fun.  I hope some of you will try it out!

http://bitcoinraffle.co/
80  Other / Beginners & Help / Re: Introduce yourself :) on: May 07, 2012, 09:11:54 PM
Hello Fellow Bitcoin Addicts,

I've been using Bitcoin for a little over two years, almost exclusively for personal purchases. 

I've decided to do a side project for fun to help promote Bitcoin at http://bitcoinraffle.co/.  The idea is to give others a chance to easily get their hands on some Bitcoin without having to install any malware, fill out endless surveys, or max out their GPU trying to mine their own coins.   

The first raffle will be for at least 10 BTC.  I say at least 10 BTC, because the drawing will be held at midnight (UTC) on the day the prize pool reaches 10 BTC.  Tickets are 0.10 BTC each, so 100 tickets need to be sold to meet the minimum prize pool. All transactions posted before midnight (UTC) on that day will be counted in the drawing, so the prize could likely be more than 10 BTC.  I'm keeping the ticket price low so it's easier for people new to Bitcoin to participate.

I will only keeping 0.5% of the take to help with overhead, so they payout will be 99.5% of whatever is collected.  So on a 10 BTC prize pool, I will make a whopping 0.05 BTC.  So you can see I'm not in this for the money, I'm doing it for fun and to help promote Bitcoin.   

I've taken some steps to ensure the system is cheat-proof.  Each ticket is made up of the following data elements:

  • Daily3 mid-day numbers from MichiganLottery.com from the day the prize pool minimum is met
  • Bitcoin address that sent the payment
  • number 0001 thru number of tickets you purchased (if you sent 3x the ticket price, your tickets would be: 0001, 0002, 0003)
  • The first Bitcoin block number with a timestamp after midnight on the day the prize pool minimum is met

SHA256 hashes are calculated for the data string (made up of the four elements listed above) for each ticket sold, then sorted (0-9,A-Z). The winner is the ticket at the top of the list.

The transactions/tickets can easily be viewed using the Bitcion Block Explorer at http://blockexplorer.com/address/1Hxjf7yzS8C5obUBcVKxFNSFVCeaVhmTeA

Still, I know this will require some level of trust.  That's another reason why I'm keeping the ticket price and prize fairly small right now.  I want people to see that it will actually work and they are not being lied to. 

I think it will be fun.  I hope some of you will try it out!

Pages: « 1 2 3 [4]
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!