Show Posts
|
Pages: [1]
|
you should do it the other way generate an address for the user to send to then you know which one has sent when it arrives.
I think I probably am gonna have to do that, but for my own understanding, why doesn't my method work?
|
|
|
Hey, I'm running a very simple spreadsheet based exchange for a small altcoin, but I'm having some major issues. I take orders via a GoogleDrive spreadsheet, and in order to verify if someone has sent a payment, I ask for their Bitcoin address, which I then compare to sender addresses when I recieve funds.
I recieved a number of payments to my exchange wallet, but none of the sender addresses match what I was given on the spreadsheet! They seem completely random.
I'm pretty buggered if I can't figure out which payment belongs to who. Can someone help me on this one? It's really urgent.
|
|
|
...isn't this basically what banks do in today's world? The only difference is that Coinbase is doing it on a smaller, riskier scale. If your local bank lost all your money (Greece) then the general answer is the same; Tough shite. The world we live in.
|
|
|
I bought £28 of Bitcoin from Bittylicious.com today. Extremely happy with the service. No fussing with accounts, put it how much I wanted, clicked trade, and everything was smooth and painfree. You're provided with their bank details and a reference. You're given a 30 minute window in which to send the money (if you go outside this window then they release the coins back onto the market). You mark the transaction as sent, and are then presented with a two hour timer, which is usually how long it takes to transfer (mine took about 110 minutes). As soon as the funds are detected, the bitcoins are sent to the wallet you designated earlier. Mine arrived pretty much instantly.
The interface is great, the rates are good and everything was just easy and quick, which I'm rapidly noticing is something difficult to find in this market.
Very happy, no fuss, quick transaction.
|
|
|
Looking to buy £28 worth of BTC in the UK, using a UK Bank Transfer. Not done this before, hoping this small purchase will help me get established both in the market and community. First confirm you're selling, then we can talk over Skype or even over the phone to hash out the details and rates.
Want to recieve the Bitcoin to my Blockchain wallet, so people will be able to see it all go through.
|
|
|
Selling my Assassin's Creed 3 code. I believe it's the Gold edition and redeemable via PSN.
Send me any offers you like. I'd prefer to be paid in Litecoin but Bitcoin are an option.
|
|
|
Hey, I've got a code for $50 of Warframe Platinum (the in-game premium currency) and I'd like to sell it on. I'd prefer to be paid in Litecoin, as I don't have a Bitcoin wallet and would have to have Bitcoins sent directly to my BTC-e account.
|
|
|
I was considering going with BTC-e but after recent accusations and a lot of bad feedback I'm definitely not intending to trust them with my Christmas money this year  So, what out there is worth using for someone in the UK who's not done any real trading before, for trading Litecoin, with decent security and a sensible way of depositing my money? At least the option to wire or SEPA my money would be good. BTE-c is out for obvious reasons. Kraken is currently out because their charts suck dick and at the moment the option to make a SEPA/Wire transfer isn't appearing for me. What does the community reccomend? There are good BTC exchanges coming out of every orifice but nothing particularly great for LTC I can find.
|
|
|
I'm using a Radeon HD 6670. I definitely have OpenCL installed with the ATI APP SDK. I try creating a new OpenCL miner, and the device is set to "Turks [0-0]" with an option to change it to my CPU. No Radeon HD 6670 or anything of the like.
Any help would be appreciated. I've mined before with limited success, and would love to give it another bash now I have a semi-decent graphics card.
|
|
|
|