Macno
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 984
Merit: 1000
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October 15, 2015, 05:28:43 PM |
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What do you think about a site, accessible from anywhere you have web access where you can run common trading bots for days?
Don't have access to your PC? Don't want to leave your PC running 24/7? We've got you covered.
That would be awesome!
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Woody20285
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1002
Supporting DMD, ERC & PIO
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October 15, 2015, 05:42:28 PM |
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What do you think about a site, accessible from anywhere you have web access where you can run common trading bots for days?
Don't have access to your PC? Don't want to leave your PC running 24/7? We've got you covered.
That would be awesome! Very exciting - This would be huge!
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NextGenCrypto
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October 15, 2015, 08:26:51 PM |
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What do you think about a site, accessible from anywhere you have web access where you can run common trading bots for days?
Don't have access to your PC? Don't want to leave your PC running 24/7? We've got you covered.
It sounds really good but I need more details. How many coins do you need in your wallet? I don't want to spend several BTC to use it. I do like bots over spending hours on an exchange constantly changing orders... Will this affect my staking? I'm loving those 10 SNRG block rewards. Access to the sites functionality will not be controlled by your holdings in your wallet, so it will not affect your staking. We're going for adoption here and the cost to use the site will be minimal, nowhere even remotely close to a single BTC, let alone several.
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tx42
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October 16, 2015, 03:08:35 AM |
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What do you think about a site, accessible from anywhere you have web access where you can run common trading bots for days?
Don't have access to your PC? Don't want to leave your PC running 24/7? We've got you covered.
I've seen a lot of bot promises these days, especially from scam ICOs. I'm sure the cost will be unreasonable. But I'll watch and see what happens.
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█ █ ██ ███ ███ ████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████ ███ ███ ██ █ ██ █ ██ ███ ███ ████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████ ███ ███ ██ █ █
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NextGenCrypto
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October 16, 2015, 03:50:45 AM |
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What do you think about a site, accessible from anywhere you have web access where you can run common trading bots for days?
Don't have access to your PC? Don't want to leave your PC running 24/7? We've got you covered.
I've seen a lot of bot promises these days, especially from scam ICOs. I'm sure the cost will be unreasonable. But I'll watch and see what happens. Well, we've never had an ICO and we're not making any promises we can't already back up. We've had multiple users testing the site for a couple weeks now ironing out bugs and providing feedback for improvements. Maybe one will stop by and chime in. The cost will absolutely be reasonable. All "costs" will be in SNRG and sent to a verifiable burn address. When users log onto the site, they will be presented with an amount, in SNRG, that will be required to burn for each day of use. You can fund one hour of use, or you can fund a whole year of use. It's up to you. This will be updated regularly. Each user will also have a unique address where they will send SNRG in order to add time to their account. Once the SNRG is sent to your unique address it will be accounted for and then sent on to the final, verifiable burn address I mentioned above. That address can be found here: SMJ12qn9jNCCXJnTYRz5Yu9ZenERqvYwfg
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Woody20285
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1002
Supporting DMD, ERC & PIO
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October 16, 2015, 05:09:14 AM |
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I logged in and tried it a couple of times. I found it easy to use and fairly intuitive if you have used a bot.
If not, that's why we have a great community to provide help.
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Grandpa Jones (OP)
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October 16, 2015, 05:51:16 AM Last edit: October 16, 2015, 06:09:17 AM by Grandpa Jones |
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When users log onto the site, they will be presented with an amount, in SNRG, that will be required to burn for each day of use. You can fund one hour of use, or you can fund a whole year of use. It's up to you. This will be updated regularly. Each user will also have a unique address where they will send SNRG in order to add time to their account. Once the SNRG is sent to your unique address it will be accounted for and then sent on to the final, verifiable burn address I mentioned above. That address can be found here: SMJ12qn9jNCCXJnTYRz5Yu9ZenERqvYwfgI should mention that the two-step way we burn coins is the only way to ensure that the coins are provably not spendable. The address SMJ12qn9jNCCXJnTYRz5Yu9ZenERqvYwfg is provably not spendable and corresponds to a 20 byte public key where each byte has the value 0. You can use a combination of a python interpreter (available in your browser here) and the Synergy Qt client to see exactly how this works out. First, you can make a bytearray of the Synergy prefix byte (63) and then 20 zeros (">>>" is the python prompt, don't type it): >>> b = bytearray([63, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]) The prefix byte makes all Synergy addresses start with an "S". To that byte array, you need to append a checksum. That checksum is calculated by taking the first four bytes of the SHA256 hash of the SHA256 hash (two nested hashes) of the bytearray, b, above: >>> import hashlib >>> hashlib.sha256(hashlib.sha256(b).digest()).hexdigest()[:8]
The result of this latter command is '7bfa0903', which corresponds to the bytes: You can see this equivalence with the following python command that converts hex to base 10 (the counting system most humans use): >>> [0x7b, 0xfa, 0x09, 0x03] These checksum bytes are appended to the bytearray, b, which can be used with the Synergy RPC command called encodebase58 (available in the next update): encodebase58 '[63, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 123, 250, 9, 3]' The result of this command is the provable burn address SMJ12qn9jNCCXJnTYRz5Yu9ZenERqvYwfg. Try it in your own console after we update. Why is this address provably not spendable? Because there is no mathematically possible private key that can correspond to the 20 byte public key of all zeros.
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Synergy Dev Team
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Colonel Crouton
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October 17, 2015, 12:12:27 AM |
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When users log onto the site, they will be presented with an amount, in SNRG, that will be required to burn for each day of use. You can fund one hour of use, or you can fund a whole year of use. It's up to you. This will be updated regularly. Each user will also have a unique address where they will send SNRG in order to add time to their account. Once the SNRG is sent to your unique address it will be accounted for and then sent on to the final, verifiable burn address I mentioned above. That address can be found here: SMJ12qn9jNCCXJnTYRz5Yu9ZenERqvYwfgI should mention that the two-step way we burn coins is the only way to ensure that the coins are provably not spendable. The address SMJ12qn9jNCCXJnTYRz5Yu9ZenERqvYwfg is provably not spendable and corresponds to a 20 byte public key where each byte has the value 0. You can use a combination of a python interpreter (available in your browser here) and the Synergy Qt client to see exactly how this works out. First, you can make a bytearray of the Synergy prefix byte (63) and then 20 zeros (">>>" is the python prompt, don't type it): >>> b = bytearray([63, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]) The prefix byte makes all Synergy addresses start with an "S". To that byte array, you need to append a checksum. That checksum is calculated by taking the first four bytes of the SHA256 hash of the SHA256 hash (two nested hashes) of the bytearray, b, above: >>> import hashlib >>> hashlib.sha256(hashlib.sha256(b).digest()).hexdigest()[:8]
The result of this latter command is '7bfa0903', which corresponds to the bytes: You can see this equivalence with the following python command that converts hex to base 10 (the counting system most humans use): >>> [0x7b, 0xfa, 0x09, 0x03] These checksum bytes are appended to the bytearray, b, which can be used with the Synergy RPC command called encodebase58 (available in the next update): encodebase58 '[63, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 123, 250, 9, 3]' The result of this command is the provable burn address SMJ12qn9jNCCXJnTYRz5Yu9ZenERqvYwfg. Try it in your own console after we update. Why is this address provably not spendable? Because there is no mathematically possible private key that can correspond to the 20 byte public key of all zeros. Tell me something I don't know. Actually, I have no idea what you are talking about, but I'll take your word for it. Keep up the good work!
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Ten-Hut!
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Digital_Currency_LTD
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October 17, 2015, 03:31:35 AM |
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When users log onto the site, they will be presented with an amount, in SNRG, that will be required to burn for each day of use. You can fund one hour of use, or you can fund a whole year of use. It's up to you. This will be updated regularly. Each user will also have a unique address where they will send SNRG in order to add time to their account. Once the SNRG is sent to your unique address it will be accounted for and then sent on to the final, verifiable burn address I mentioned above. That address can be found here: SMJ12qn9jNCCXJnTYRz5Yu9ZenERqvYwfgI should mention that the two-step way we burn coins is the only way to ensure that the coins are provably not spendable. The address SMJ12qn9jNCCXJnTYRz5Yu9ZenERqvYwfg is provably not spendable and corresponds to a 20 byte public key where each byte has the value 0. You can use a combination of a python interpreter (available in your browser here) and the Synergy Qt client to see exactly how this works out. First, you can make a bytearray of the Synergy prefix byte (63) and then 20 zeros (">>>" is the python prompt, don't type it): >>> b = bytearray([63, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]) The prefix byte makes all Synergy addresses start with an "S". To that byte array, you need to append a checksum. That checksum is calculated by taking the first four bytes of the SHA256 hash of the SHA256 hash (two nested hashes) of the bytearray, b, above: >>> import hashlib >>> hashlib.sha256(hashlib.sha256(b).digest()).hexdigest()[:8]
The result of this latter command is '7bfa0903', which corresponds to the bytes: You can see this equivalence with the following python command that converts hex to base 10 (the counting system most humans use): >>> [0x7b, 0xfa, 0x09, 0x03] These checksum bytes are appended to the bytearray, b, which can be used with the Synergy RPC command called encodebase58 (available in the next update): encodebase58 '[63, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 123, 250, 9, 3]' The result of this command is the provable burn address SMJ12qn9jNCCXJnTYRz5Yu9ZenERqvYwfg. Try it in your own console after we update. Why is this address provably not spendable? Because there is no mathematically possible private key that can correspond to the 20 byte public key of all zeros. Tell me something I don't know. Actually, I have no idea what you are talking about, but I'll take your word for it. Keep up the good work! Is short: we will have a New site, and people can use it for Synergy. Every synergy that you paid will be burned and send to an unspendable wallet. Am I right Nextgen?
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NextGenCrypto
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October 17, 2015, 04:03:11 AM Last edit: October 17, 2015, 06:31:34 AM by NextGenCrypto |
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Is short: we will have a New site, and people can use it for Synergy. Every synergy that you paid will be burned and send to an unspendable wallet.
Am I right Nextgen?
Right you are! SNRG will be burned to an unspendable address to use features on the site.
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NextGenCrypto
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October 18, 2015, 07:16:40 AM |
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Monday is just around the corner!
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Macno
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 984
Merit: 1000
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October 18, 2015, 10:38:46 AM |
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Great! I`m really eager to see what you guys have developped.
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MrPump
Member
Offline
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
follow me to make money
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October 19, 2015, 02:44:11 AM |
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If you guys need capt for pump (when your pump part of coin gets back) - you know where to find MrPump!
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NextGenCrypto
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October 19, 2015, 06:25:46 AM |
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Great! I`m really eager to see what you guys have developped.
And we're just as eager to show it off to everyone! We'll have something to show you guys tomorrow evening.
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bittamak
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October 19, 2015, 12:21:45 PM |
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Nice going guys...will wait for the updates..
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Grandpa Jones (OP)
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October 20, 2015, 04:52:41 AM |
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Monday is just around the corner!
Monday has arrived, and you can see the first (of a few) updates posted in the OP and below. We've spent the last couple months hard at work on establishing just what Synergy was to represent and along with that came a new logo and brand. We've updated the logo, coin specs, roadmap and all of our icons and header. You'll see this color scheme, logo, etc. persistent across our platforms as they are developed. We hope you enjoy it just as much as we do and look forward to any suggestions you may have. Stay tuned! As one from the Synergy community, congratulations on this great work in organizing the re-brand. It looks terrific. I've been doing my own thing, and although I am assisting in your rebrand and cloud services roll-out, much of this look and functionality is new to me. I can't wait to watch the spectacle over the next few days while this release goes live.
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Synergy Dev Team
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eB101
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October 20, 2015, 05:27:45 AM |
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Great theme and logos, good job team! It's only going to get better, I can't wait for the cloud bots
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bittamak
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October 20, 2015, 05:39:45 AM |
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Yep. New design looks good...Interesting to see cloud bot
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lajz99
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October 20, 2015, 06:37:47 AM |
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That is SLICK! Glad to see the team is still working hard on Synergy. Rare find these days.
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