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1  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Bitcoin Cash blockchain will overtake Bitcoin Core blockchain. on: August 22, 2017, 02:43:20 PM
Bitcoin Cash at 481608.

Bitcoin Core at 481614.

Implications of this happening?

Is Bitcoin Cash producing too many blocks?
2  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Why Cryptocurrencies Will Never Be Safe Havens on: August 15, 2017, 05:56:49 PM
https://mises.org/blog/why-cryptocurrencies-will-never-be-safe-havens

Discuss...
3  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Mike Hearn still holding Bitcoin. on: August 11, 2017, 08:19:49 PM
Look at this thread https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2080206.0;all

Look at this https://pastebin.com/Na5FwkQ4

Whilst reading the emails, assuming they are not fakes, I'd spotted this?

In chronological order.

23-2-2009 10:05:15 Reward From Block 5326 mined by Satoshi Nakamoto. 1AfRNhdvL5zYL1FTxM9mHyYnHuHK4TpLYh.

14-4-2009 7:41 PM Satoshi Nakamoto emailed, "If you send to 1PhUXucRd8FzQved2KGK3g1eKfTHPGjgFu and e-mail me your bitcoin address, or IP if you can accept incoming connections, I'll send back the same amount +50" to Mike Hearn.

16-4-2009 13:04:58 Reward From Block 11157 mined by Mike Hearn. 151FzoGsL4XiswSCpMBmii41WL9b6uweNg.

16-4-2009 16:33:26 Reward From Block 11173 mined by Mike Hearn. 16LukCKiiraP5iDT8X4ZgDGufq7L4dtg6o.

18-4-2009 13:08:22 Included In Blocks 11395 Mike Hearn sent 32.51 BTC to Satoshi Nakamoto. 151FzoGsL4XiswSCpMBmii41WL9b6uweNg to 1PhUXucRd8FzQved2KGK3g1eKfTHPGjgFu.

18-4-2009 15:08 Mike Hearn emailed, "I sent you 32.51 coins, my bitcoin address is 1JuEjh9znXwqsy5RrnKqgzqY4Ldg7rnj5n" to Satoshi Nakamoto.

18-4-2009 15:55:19 Included In Blocks 11408 Satoshi Nakamoto sent 32.51 BTC back to Mike Hearn. 1PhUXucRd8FzQved2KGK3g1eKfTHPGjgFu to 1JuEjh9znXwqsy5RrnKqgzqY4Ldg7rnj5n. Satoshi Nakamoto also sent 50 BTC (mined 23-2-2009 10:05:15) to Mike Hearn. 1AfRNhdvL5zYL1FTxM9mHyYnHuHK4TpLYh to 1JuEjh9znXwqsy5RrnKqgzqY4Ldg7rnj5n.

18-4-2009 18:16 Satoshi Nakamoto emailed, "I sent back 32.51 and 50.00" to Mike Hearn.

18-4-2009 19:34:27 Included In Blocks 11426 Mike Hearn sent 50 BTC (mined 16-4-2009 16:33:26) back to Satoshi Nakamoto. 16LukCKiiraP5iDT8X4ZgDGufq7L4dtg6o to 1PhUXucRd8FzQved2KGK3g1eKfTHPGjgFu.

18-4-2009 21:25 Mike Hearn emailed, "Thanks. I sent you back 50, so now we're even" to Satoshi Nakamoto.

18-4-2009 22:52 Satoshi Nakamoto emailed, "Got the 50" to Mike Hearn.

This proves that Mike Hearn still has 81.51 BTC at 1JuEjh9znXwqsy5RrnKqgzqY4Ldg7rnj5n plus 17.49 BTC at 151FzoGsL4XiswSCpMBmii41WL9b6uweNg.

https://blog.plan99.net/the-resolution-of-the-bitcoin-experiment-dabb30201f7#.r5kbauxsn
"I will no longer be taking part in Bitcoin development and have sold all my coins."

https://cointelegraph.com/news/how-mike-hearn-sold-all-his-bitcoins-in-2016-and-market-proved-him-wrong
Terrible article since Mike still has at least 100 BTC.

All the usual FUDers attacking Mike in the past got it wrong.

Curiously why did Satoshi Nakamoto sent 50 BTC on 18th April (mined 23-2-2009 10:05:15) to Mike Hearn. 1AfRNhdvL5zYL1FTxM9mHyYnHuHK4TpLYh. Think about it, Satoshi Nakamoto could have used an earlier block from January when he was mining almost alone. Satoshi Nakamoto picked the address from 23rd February 2009 which was almost mined 2 months prior. Did Satoshi Nakamoto not mine any blocks after 23rd February or did he just randomly pick that address?
4  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Total value of both Bitcoins. on: August 11, 2017, 12:22:02 PM
Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin Core >$3,800. (increment of $100)

I though a thread tracking the total value of both Bitcoins may be of interest for some. Perhaps a weekly update every Friday.

Evidence showed that since August 5th 2017, the total value of both Bitcoin has been going up steadily. The greatest FUDs of the crypto age of dumping Bitcoin Cash to $1 didn't happen. Day by day, the total was >$3,000, then >$3100, and so on. I suspect the hardfork, so far, has been a success for both bitcoins. The free market of price discovery and investment has proven the FUDers and scaremongers all wrong, so far.

2 questions.

1. Are there new money coming in for both bitcoins?
2. Are those with investment in altcoins switching to either or both bitcoins?

I would say a bit of both so far.
5  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Is there a way of selecting peers by software version? on: August 04, 2017, 06:02:27 PM
I have two chains in two directories, Bitcoin Core and Bitcoin Cash.

I want Bitcoin Core to connect to those using Core software and Bitcoin Cash to connect to those using Cash software.

How do i do that? Using ban/disconnect is so time consuming.
6  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / This node's scheduled chain split has occurred. on: August 01, 2017, 01:41:38 PM
According to https://www.btcforkmonitor.info/

 Node: Bitcoin ABC (Bitcoin Cash; Bcash)

    Current height: 478558
    Current Median Time: Aug. 1, 2017, 12:37 p.m. UTC
    Best Block Hash:
    0000000000000000011865af4122fe3b144e2cbeea86142e8ff2fb4107352d43
    Previous Block Hash:
    000000000000000000eb9bc1f9557dc9e2cfe576f57a52f6be94720b338029e4
    Has Experienced a Blockchain Reorganization: No
    Has not forked but is behind other nodes: Yes
    This node's scheduled chain split has occurred


And now the drama begins. BTC price falling.
7  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Are Bitcoin Core developers being paid by Visa? on: July 14, 2017, 01:58:25 PM
Not to scale Bitcoin and compete with Visa? What would the probability be, based on Core's behaviour in the last two years?

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4694894/Credit-card-giant-Visa-wants-shops-ditch-cash.html

Visa has already begun a trial in the US which offers $10,000 (£8,800) to retailers who are prepared to update their payment terminals.
However, they can only get the deal if they agree to stop accepting cash transactions. A similar trial is expected to be launched in the UK.

Visa can go fuck themselves.
8  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / > 60,000 txs > 100mb memory usage. on: April 24, 2017, 11:13:40 PM
Transactions in mempool.

A new personal record for me.

Had to make sure my eyes didn't pop out 100%.
9  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Where do each stand from A to Z? on: April 23, 2017, 08:26:23 PM
Had this buried in another thread but i thought we can be debate it properly on here.

I suspect many will have many likes and dislikes, so where do you stand from A to Z?

The scenarios can be played out like this. Example.
A - 95% of the miners support increasing 21m coins to 30m coins. 95% of the users reject it. Users keep their money in BTC and very little goes into AltBTC. Users fire up their mining equipment and the miners mine a worthless low value coin that very few will buy. Miners will realise the errors of their ways and stop mining AltBTC and support BTC.
B - 95% of the miners support increasing 21m coins to 30m coins. 95% of the users support it. BTC will now mine 30m coins. Crazy it may be but what can the 5% do? Dump their coins?
C - 95% of the miners reject 21m coins to 30m coins. 95% of the users support it. Users keep their money in BTC and very little goes into AltBTC. Users fire up their mining equipment and the miners mine a worthless low value coin that very little will buy. Miners will realise the errors of their ways and stop mining AltBTC and support BTC. One then realise the users do have power over their money and that what create value.

The idea that 95% of the users want to increase the coins from 21m to 30m won't happen because it will devalue their BTC, and users are not that stupid, so don't worry.

Now there is division over BU and Core. Both have made grievous errors. Both are proposing so many changes at once. This is a fundamental mistake.

Core - Segwit, LN
BU - dynamic block (EC), flextrans, sidechain.

Person -
A - Core
B - BU
C - segwit and sidechain
D - segwit and not LN
E - Flextrans and LN
F - Flextrans and sidechain
G - Flextrans and dynamic block but not sidechain
and so on. There too many combination of choices and thus many divisions. Therein lies the grievous errors.

I and many others (perhaps over 80%) support bigger block. Easy to raise 1mb to 2mb. Miners support 2mb in the Hong Kong agreement. Albeit with Segwit. Now that half the miners don't support segwit, common sense dictate that the only proposal on the table that will work is -

Z - raise blocksize to 2mb. See B above and it will becomes this -

B - 95% of the miners support increasing 1mb to 2mb. 95% of the users support it. BTC will now have 2mb limit. Everyone is now happy and the objectors will be happy when the value of BTC goes higher.

This could have be done last year or even 2 years ago. None of us would be here debating.

The moral of the story is that when dealing with $billions, one change at a time.
10  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / What computer do you lot use? on: April 16, 2017, 09:38:34 PM
I7-4790k. 16gb memory.

The reason i am asking is because of all these comments by users on this forum:-
Huge computational requirement.
Expensive to run Full Node.
Consumes a lot of memory.
Overheating.
Takes to long to create blocks.
blah
blah
blah.

When i use my computer and run Bitcoin as Full node, i do keep my beady eye on the network meter and cpu usage in my sidebar. I have never seen it go over 2% according to all measurement i'd used to track what Bitcoin used. The most memory i've seen is 85mb which hardly makes a dent into 16gb. My browser with 12 tabs open does more work than Bitcoin. Electricity usage by Bitcoin is probably a penny per week.

Which begs the question - what crappy computer does these moaners use?
11  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / [ANN] What would be the near perfect coin? on: March 11, 2014, 02:06:28 AM
What would be the near perfect coin?

Well it's quite simple. When you look through all the cryptocoins, including Bitcoin and Litecoin, what are you looking for? A times you may think....good...good...good....bad...bad....good....good....bad....and so on when seeing what the coin design is.

Things to consider:-
- number of coins
- method of mining
- block reward
- block distribution
- and so and so.

Many of you have been here long enough to have some ideas of a near perfect coin.

Many of you have seen many coins and noticed their flaws and positive ideas.

So ladies and gentleman, boys and girls, let's debate using higher intellect to find that near perfect coin.

Trolls - find something else to do if you are bored.  Grin Grin Grin
12  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / What would be the near perfect coin? on: March 10, 2014, 11:30:26 PM
What would be the near perfect coin?

Well it's quite simple. When you look through all the cryptocoins, including Bitcoin and Litecoin, what are you looking for? A times you may think....good...good...good....bad...bad....good....good....bad....and so on when seeing what the coin design is.

Things to consider:-
- number of coins
- method of mining
- block reward
- block distribution
- and so and so.

Many of you have been here long enough to have some ideas of a near perfect coin.

Many of you have seen many coins and noticed their flaws and positive ideas.

So ladies and gentleman, boys and girls, let's debate using higher intellect to find that near perfect coin.

Trolls - find something else to do if you are bored. Grin Grin Grin
13  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Bitcoin Bank Run on: February 10, 2014, 05:47:13 PM
Don't know if anyone read this on here but i'll put it up just in case.

http://bastiat.mises.org/2014/02/bitcoin-bank-run/

"By David Howden   
Saturday, February 8th, 2014

Ever wonder what a digital bank run looks like? Nearly one million Mt. Gox users are finding out first hand.

The Tokyo-based exchange, popular amongst currency traders, has risen in prominence by offering its customers storage services in a variety of currencies. This effectively makes it act as an online bank. One such “currency” that it allows accounts to be denominated in is bitcoin.

Yesterday the exchange halted withdrawals of the digital currency, citing a technical malfunction. It promises to reopen for business on February 10th. What many news sources are missing is that this is not a particularly new development – the exchange has been rejecting customer withdrawals on-and-off for about two months.

What may be happening is a good old fashioned bank run. Like all banks, Mt. Gox is operating under a system of fractional reserves, loaning out or otherwise making use of bitcoin deposits entrusted to it. There are many more claims to the bitcoins depositors have with it than are actually in the digital “vault” at Mt. Gox. This is not unlike your bank, which has many more claims to each dollar deposited in it than it has dollars in the vault to honor. If too many people make a withdrawal at the same time, your bank has two options.

Option one is that everyone gets some small percentage of their original deposit. Option two is that only the first small percentage of people who get to the bank first get their whole deposit. Neither option looks very appetizing.

Mt. Gox has decided to use a method to stymie its own bank run which is not without precedent – it has halted redemptions. Of course, this policy was used widely by banks in many fractional-reserve regimes before the advent of deposit insurance, notably in Scotland.

In the Scottish fractional-reserve free banking experience, the option clause stated that a bank could halt redemption of a depositor’s funds, but would have to pay interest for this privilege. Besides the obvious rights violation of turning your deposit into a loan (but hey, at least they paid interest on it), the policy was also not able to stop banks from loaning out deposits until there was nearly a continual suspension of withdrawals. (At least, according to the expert on the period, Sydney Checkland.)

Mt. Gox has used this policy with a twist. Instead of promising your money back in the future with an added interest payment, it is “allowing” you to withdraw your bitcoin now by paying an additional fee.

Lest this post be misunderstood, this is not a fundamental problem of bitcoin, but one of fractional-reserve banking. Here we have an example of a purely unregulated currency succumbing to the same problems that have plagued money users for hundreds of years. When banks are allowed to function with fractional reserves, it matters not if the money is state-issued (like dollars) or market-created (like bitcoin), the outcome is the same: bank runs and depositors left with the inevitable losses.

(Originally posted at Mises Canada.)"

One thing that does bother me with all exchanges i'd used so far is the 'withdrawal fees'. I do the work when making a withdrawal by inputting the relevant address and wait. The exchanges do nothing but charges us for withdrawing what is rightfully ours.

One thing i've been thinking about, is there any genius programmers who are capable of coming up with a peer to peer exchange. It would work something like downloading a 'wallet' and in it one inputs their orders and send it to a 'order blockchain'. The 'wallet' would also updates the 'order blockchain' to one's computer and can see what other orders there are. Obviously it would need more research on the possibility of creating one.
14  Other / Beginners & Help / Cat coin - http://cat.coinium.org/ on: December 24, 2013, 07:22:25 PM
Hi all.

This restriction on 'newbie' posting is ridiculous.

Anyway, i have been mining at  Cat coin - http://cat.coinium.org/ and according to my guiminer i am getting my shares but in the console it says...

Stratum connection to pool 0 interrupted
2013-12-24 19:14:19: Listener for "catcoin": [2013-12-24 19:14:17] Lost 3 shares due to stratum disconnect on pool 0
2013-12-24 19:15:27: Listener for "catcoin": [2013-12-24 19:15:26] Pool 0 stratum+tcp://stratum.coinium.org:3336 not responding!

and on and on....losing shares.

My account on http://cat.coinium.org/ shows only 1.4 coin?Huh

Have stopped mining this for now.

Can someone explain what the problem is?

Not expecting any answers since this is a newbie threads for 'newbies'.....here hoping.
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