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81  Other / Off-topic / Re: Make 500$ a month with airdrops ? on: May 21, 2018, 11:09:34 AM
Hello everyone,

I have been doing airdrops since August now and I have managed to win on average 500$ a month with them (eBTC, EthereumCash, POSToken...). I wonder if this is a "Lucky period" or if it is usual ? Maybe some of you have more experience than I do and I would love to have your feedback.

In case you wonder, my main Airdrop Source is a very good french (yeah I speak french fluently Cheesy) Telegram Channel : https://t.me/cryptoanalyseAirdropAlerte
If you don't speak french it's not a problem. Just click on the weblinks.

I hope I could make this much as well soon! Lol looking forward to making $ here. But to be honest, the reason why I'm here is because I want to know what's happening in our world in relation to crypto currency. Behold as we enter the Digital age
82  Other / Off-topic / Re: Top 10 pc game on: May 21, 2018, 07:51:51 AM
Top 10 Games of all times

1. Warcraft III
2. Pokemon
3. Starcraft
4. Resident Evil
5. Call of Duty
6. Super Mario - BEST OF ALL TIMES
7. Mortal Combat
8. Crash Bandicoot
9. Ragnarok Online
10. Pacman
83  Economy / Economics / Re: Is banking still important in the bitcoin era? on: May 21, 2018, 01:19:32 AM
Financial technologies such as bitcoin, P2P lending and crowdfunding are just beginning to take off, and businesses involved in the industry pose little immediate threat to traditional commercial banks. Banks, after all, the country's economic lifeline, so I think the bank is still very important, do you think?

This is a very good one and will most likely become one of the heated discussion about BTC. The reason being is that, BTC utterly destroys the money making scheme of banks. Banks primarily earn money by allowing the people to deposit their money in a very stagnant (with very very little interest rate on it) financial vehicle. The banks then of course use this money to lend to people, and circulate the money but still keep a good amount of money for the depositors to withdraw their money at any point in time. Imagine if people can easily store their money in an e-wallet or just dispose majority of their fiat money and turn it to bitcoin for transactions. There'd be no point in keeping your money in the bank. If the Bitcoin will become as stable as the fiat money, trading and exchanging of currency will be of very little cost. You can make an exchange to the other side of the world instantaneously, you can store your purchasing power in it with very little risk of being affected by the inflation.

This only my opinion but in the near future, if BTC will be accepted and adopted by our government, the banks still be playing a very important role but they will take a MASSIVE hit as a lot of people will be transferring their money in bank to get a portion of the digital currency.
84  Economy / Economics / Re: Why I am quitting ICO's on: May 20, 2018, 11:40:09 PM
Interesting point of view.
I'm on exactly opposite end - I'm going deeper with ICO's this year.

Your points are pretty valid, but this mean you just need to be more peaky where you are investing. And I'm always and only buying during the pre-ico phase, avoiding those ICO's with massive pre-sale.

What does it mean to buy pre-ICO? Isn't ICO the first release or salfe of the tokens? Newbie here, and hoping for your kind understanding.
85  Economy / Services / Re: I'll pay you to buy a $0.99 book on: May 20, 2018, 03:19:14 PM
As the title says, I'll pay you to buy a $0.99 book on Amazon and a couple of other places.

Doing this to boost the book's rank.

Don't need this right now but I'm compiling a list of people who want to make a quick buck ahead of time.

How it works:

1) I pay you through bitcoin (or other cryptos, I guess) or paypal

2) You buy the book

Simple Smiley

If you're interested, tell me how much you want to get paid for this and how many times you can do it. I don't mind if you also buy using a friend or family member's account, as long as you prove (with WhatIsMyIP.com screenshots) that you used another ip or computer. I don't want the same person buying the book over and over again...

Is this still up? Very interested on this one

Hi, please tell me if this one is still up. I would like to participate on this please. Thank you! Looking forward to working with you.
86  Economy / Trading Discussion / Re: Why you should buy Bitcoin now. on: May 20, 2018, 03:05:01 PM
I have been following bitcoin price's actions since August last year and one thing that is common is that price pattern do repeat itself. Event that happens in July to August this year is about to repeat itself again. I have been going through a lot of speculations threads and many of them are saying that bitcoin is going to clash after splitting but I disagree with that and for your information another pump is about to happen and this is going to push bitcoin price above  $8,000. I have also see that this may happen before end of this year.
I think that this time around, it is not really good for you to buy bitcoin, you can tell that Bitcoin prices are constantly adjusting over the past few days and the current trend is still falling. Market capitalization continues to decline and according to my analysis, the current $ 8000 level is not bottom of the bitcoin at this time, according to my technical analysis, the bitcoin price may reach $ 7800 then new rise again.

You have to buy bitcoin now because it has just came down drastically. The normal and stable levels would most likely be around $10-15k. This is just based on speculation and based on my personal understanding of the market. Some are saying 2018 will become a bullish market for Bitcoin and reach an all time $50k. I am yet to find a solid grounding for this but at the moment, I am very skeptical about the market rate of Bitcoin going beyond $20k.

I believe the market price of Bitcoin will go down soon. Its very hard to believe that the government will not shut down cryptocurrency as it will kill the purpose of having banks, specially the Central Bank.
87  Economy / Trading Discussion / Re: Right now should I wait to buy ? on: May 20, 2018, 12:33:55 PM
Reading this source, I understand that prices are likely to go below 8k. Do you agree with those analysis?


 https://www.coindesk.com/bear-revival-bitcoin-risks-fall-below-8k-after-3-5-week-low/amp/

I believe this is the best time to buy bitcoin. Personally I think even if the price gets dragged down, it will be back up sooner or later. This is just my opinion and I have my own analysis about this. But so many things can happen and there are so many variables that needs to be considered. So I suggest do your own study, research, read a lot, speculate the movement of the market, do everything that can make you understand more about the market and then use your own judgement
88  Economy / Trading Discussion / Re: Is worth buying coins under $1? on: May 20, 2018, 12:17:49 PM
What's your opinion on buying new emerging coins that are not yet on top and cost less than 1 dollar?
How do you decide whether they have potential to grow or not?

What I believe is worth it, is when you buy at least one type of cryptocurrency there is (or probably just the ones you believe would grow) because if this cryptocurrency grows by hundredfolds, you get to win. What's got to lose anyway if it's just 1 dollar or less, right?

Regarding on how should you decide whether they have the potential or not, is something that I yet have to learn and understand.
89  Economy / Economics / Re: Study says being rich is determined by chance rather than intelligence or talent on: May 20, 2018, 12:05:43 PM
Quote
If you’re so smart, why aren’t you rich? Turns out it’s just chance

The most successful people are not the most talented, just the luckiest, a new computer model of wealth creation confirms. Taking that into account can maximize return on many kinds of investment.

The distribution of wealth follows a well-known pattern sometimes called an 80:20 rule: 80 percent of the wealth is owned by 20 percent of the people. Indeed, a report last year concluded that just eight men had a total wealth equivalent to that of the world’s poorest 3.8 billion people.

This seems to occur in all societies at all scales. It is a well-studied pattern called a power law that crops up in a wide range of social phenomena. But the distribution of wealth is among the most controversial because of the issues it raises about fairness and merit. Why should so few people have so much wealth?

The conventional answer is that we live in a meritocracy in which people are rewarded for their talent, intelligence, effort, and so on. Over time, many people think, this translates into the wealth distribution that we observe, although a healthy dose of luck can play a role.

But there is a problem with this idea: while wealth distribution follows a power law, the distribution of human skills generally follows a normal distribution that is symmetric about an average value. For example, intelligence, as measured by IQ tests, follows this pattern. Average IQ is 100, but nobody has an IQ of 1,000 or 10,000.

The same is true of effort, as measured by hours worked. Some people work more hours than average and some work less, but nobody works a billion times more hours than anybody else.

And yet when it comes to the rewards for this work, some people do have billions of times more wealth than other people. What’s more, numerous studies have shown that the wealthiest people are generally not the most talented by other measures.

What factors, then, determine how individuals become wealthy? Could it be that chance plays a bigger role than anybody expected? And how can these factors, whatever they are, be exploited to make the world a better and fairer place
?

Today we get an answer thanks to the work of Alessandro Pluchino at the University of Catania in Italy and a couple of colleagues. These guys have created a computer model of human talent and the way people use it to exploit opportunities in life. The model allows the team to study the role of chance in this process.

The results are something of an eye-opener. Their simulations accurately reproduce the wealth distribution in the real world. But the wealthiest individuals are not the most talented (although they must have a certain level of talent). They are the luckiest. And this has significant implications for the way societies can optimize the returns they get for investments in everything from business to science.

Pluchino and co’s model is straightforward. It consists of N people, each with a certain level of talent (skill, intelligence, ability, and so on). This talent is distributed normally around some average level, with some standard deviation. So some people are more talented than average and some are less so, but nobody is orders of magnitude more talented than anybody else.

This is the same kind of distribution seen for various human skills, or even characteristics like height or weight. Some people are taller or smaller than average, but nobody is the size of an ant or a skyscraper. Indeed, we are all quite similar
.

The computer model charts each individual through a working life of 40 years. During this time, the individuals experience lucky events that they can exploit to increase their wealth if they are talented enough.

However, they also experience unlucky events that reduce their wealth. These events occur at random.

At the end of the 40 years, Pluchino and co rank the individuals by wealth and study the characteristics of the most successful. They also calculate the wealth distribution. They then repeat the simulation many times to check the robustness of the outcome.

When the team rank individuals by wealth, the distribution is exactly like that seen in real-world societies. “The ‘80-20’ rule is respected, since 80 percent of the population owns only 20 percent of the total capital, while the remaining 20 percent owns 80 percent of the same capital,” report Pluchino and co.

That may not be surprising or unfair if the wealthiest 20 percent turn out to be the most talented. But that isn’t what happens. The wealthiest individuals are typically not the most talented or anywhere near it. “The maximum success never coincides with the maximum talent, and vice-versa,” say the researchers.

So if not talent, what other factor causes this skewed wealth distribution? “Our simulation clearly shows that such a factor is just pure luck,” say Pluchino and co.

The team shows this by ranking individuals according to the number of lucky and unlucky events they experience throughout their 40-year careers. “It is evident that the most successful individuals are also the luckiest ones,” they say. “And the less successful individuals are also the unluckiest ones.”

That has significant implications for society. What is the most effective strategy for exploiting the role luck plays in success?

Pluchino and co study this from the point of view of science research funding, an issue clearly close to their hearts. Funding agencies the world over are interested in maximizing their return on investment in the scientific world. Indeed, the European Research Council recently invested $1.7 million in a program to study serendipity—the role of luck in scientific discovery—and how it can be exploited to improve funding outcomes.

It turns out that Pluchino and co are well set to answer this question. They use their model to explore different kinds of funding models to see which produce the best returns when luck is taken into account.

The team studied three models, in which research funding is distributed equally to all scientists; distributed randomly to a subset of scientists; or given preferentially to those who have been most successful in the past. Which of these is the best strategy?

The strategy that delivers the best returns, it turns out, is to divide the funding equally among all researchers. And the second- and third-best strategies involve distributing it at random to 10 or 20 percent of scientists.

In these cases, the researchers are best able to take advantage of the serendipitous discoveries they make from time to time. In hindsight, it is obvious that the fact a scientist has made an important chance discovery in the past does not mean he or she is more likely to make one in the future.

A similar approach could also be applied to investment in other kinds of enterprises, such as small or large businesses, tech startups, education that increases talent, or even the creation of random lucky events.

Clearly, more work is needed here. What are we waiting for?

Ref: arxiv.org/abs/1802.07068 : Talent vs. Luck: The Role of Randomness in Success and Failure

https://www.technologyreview.com/s/610395/if-youre-so-smart-why-arent-you-rich-turns-out-its-just-chance/

A very interesting spin on anything that has ever been said about money, success or wealth!

I don't know what to think about this. The scaling argument which says 1% of the human population shouldn't own 40% of the world's wealth due to them not having IQ's of 200,000 or talent proportional to the highly disproportionate stake of wealth they control is something that will take time for me to digest and think about. Its certainly a novel concept.

Its also very interesting that they attempted to model along lines of standard deviation and wound up with a historical 20/80 wealth distribution. I think this is something which could use more exposure and media coverage. Its not often relatively original or new perspectives like this come along and the paradigm shift which can accompany them can often take decades to be fully appreciated within a pop culture vein.

Though this is true, I don't completely agree with this statement.

This is where I'm coming from. In life, you get what you deserve. One way or another, something you've done will come back to you whether it be good or bad. You may think it's the same as karma and maybe it is, maybe it's not. All I'm saying is, whatever you are doing right now, there will be consequences. And if you are doing whatever you can to be successful in life, you will definitely be successful. And if you want to get rich in life and is doing everything you can rich, then you will be.

At the end of the day, what determines whether or not you will be rich is not being just knowledgeable and smart, whatever you call it. It's your decisions and actions in life.
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