cedivad
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Merit: 1001
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October 09, 2012, 09:41:41 PM |
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50'000$ 10 years from now.
I will actually come back in ten years to check my guess.
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My anger against what is wrong in the Bitcoin community is productive: Bitcointa.lk - Replace "Bitcointalk.org" with "Bitcointa.lk" in this url to see how this page looks like on a proper forum (Announcement Thread)Hashfast.org - Wiki for screwed customers
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IntrepidMiner
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Activity: 29
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October 10, 2012, 12:43:19 AM |
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I don't care as long as the price goes up like it is designed to. Yeah I'm working on getting some friends in to it, but people are so close minded.
Just curious - what have your friends said? I outright gave one of my friends a bitcoin after he expressed some interest in it, and he seemed pretty stoked. He's over it now but he's got it in an encrypted wallet, and it only cost me $12. What I hope doesn't happen is that he loses it, then prices skyrocket - 15 years from now he'd be wishing he had an extra $10,000 in his pocket.
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koin
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Activity: 873
Merit: 1000
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October 10, 2012, 01:34:31 AM |
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15 years from now he'd be wishing he had an extra $10,000 in his pocket.
which, by then, will buy dinner for two at denny's.
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Pteppic
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Activity: 110
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October 10, 2012, 10:27:38 AM |
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An interesting way of thinking about it is how many people can be richer than you in Bitcoin. If you have 2,100BTC then you have to be in the richest 10,000 people in the world in bitcoin terms. If you have 210BTC then you have to be in the richest 100,000.
It gives you an idea of how small bitcoin still is. If even 1 million people were interested in bitcoin, they could have no more than 21BTC each. And that's just in the long run. At the moment, they could only have about 10BTC each.
If bitcoin got big, it could get very very big.
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"Remember too on every occasion which leads you to vexation to apply this principle: not that this is a misfortune, but that to bear it nobly is good fortune." - Marcus Aurelius
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Energizer
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October 10, 2012, 10:36:45 AM |
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I expect BTC to double its value at least once per year for the coming 2 years. Based on that theory I expect the following:
December 2012: 1 BTC = at least 15 USD December 2013: 1 BTC = at least 30 USD December 2014: 1 BTC = at least 50 USD December 2015: 1 BTC = at least 80 USD
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Graet
VIP
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October 10, 2012, 11:38:04 AM |
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over 9000
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dieteralex
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October 10, 2012, 11:51:48 AM |
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the only thing tht would stop the growing value, is the goverment intervening.
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robocoin
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October 10, 2012, 12:01:23 PM |
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I predict a BTC price of ~25$ for Q1 2013. Why do I think so? I expect the mining difficulty to be 50,000,000+ when Bitcoin ASICS are actually shipped to the miners. With an investment of 150$ and a hashrate of 4500 MH/s, a conversion rate of 25$ would be the minimum to get your Investment back within ~6 months. I expect miniers will refuse selling BTC below this mark. Of course I can be totally wrong about the difficulty (maybe twice as hard ). With Moore's Law in mind we could see 50$/BTC in Q4 2014. Try here: http://bitcoinx.com/profit/index.php
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DannyHamilton
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October 10, 2012, 12:49:31 PM |
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. . .a conversion rate of 25$ would be the minimum to get your Investment back within ~6 months. I expect miniers will refuse selling BTC below this mark. . .
According to bitcoincharts.com, an average of 48,866.47 BTC were sent per hour yesterday. Mining creates approximately 300 BTC per hour. Even if every single miner sold exchanged BTC they mined, the exchange of freshly minted coins would account for less than 0.62% of all BTC transactions. Since many miners hold on to their coins, the number is probably quite a bit less than that. It would seem that the price miners are willing to sell at isn't the only thing setting the exchange rate for BTC.
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nobbynobbynoob
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October 10, 2012, 12:58:08 PM |
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I predict a BTC price of ~25$ for Q1 2013. Why do I think so? I expect the mining difficulty to be 50,000,000+ when Bitcoin ASICS are actually shipped to the miners.
Gosh, that's pessimistic! I guess I'm holding onto all of them or selling only at >> $30/ BTC if that's the case, though.
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robocoin
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October 10, 2012, 01:01:31 PM |
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. . .a conversion rate of 25$ would be the minimum to get your Investment back within ~6 months. I expect miniers will refuse selling BTC below this mark. . .
According to bitcoincharts.com, an average of 48,866.47 BTC were sent per hour yesterday. Mining creates approximately 300 BTC per hour. Even if every single miner sold exchanged BTC they mined, the exchange of freshly minted coins would account for less than 0.62% of all BTC transactions. Since many miners hold on to their coins, the number is probably quite a bit less than that. It would seem that the price miners are willing to sell at isn't the only thing setting the exchange rate for BTC. Very true! But at least I wouldn't sell my coins for less, IF my calculation proofs right.
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Wekkel
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Merit: 1531
yes
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October 10, 2012, 01:13:49 PM |
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btcfaucet
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Activity: 166
Merit: 100
Bitcoin Faucet
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October 10, 2012, 01:47:19 PM |
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$20 (20 posts needed to get out, right?)
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Akka
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Activity: 1232
Merit: 1001
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October 10, 2012, 01:50:04 PM |
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$20 (20 posts needed to get out, right?)
Only 5, and 4 hours of longtime. So know do you thing 5$ or 4$ as you strangely ling this together.
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All previous versions of currency will no longer be supported as of this update
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macsga
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Activity: 1484
Merit: 1002
Strange, yet attractive.
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October 10, 2012, 02:12:03 PM |
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If you count the factor that fiat money can be made out of thin air, versus the BTC is only made once, this fact only gives BTC an enormous plus for the years to come. Chances are (and I've written it elsewhere) people who are in possession of BTCs in the future won't have the slightest will to sell them off for fiat money.
If I can make a correlation that would be with the value of diamonds nowadays. You know what gives them power? The fact that they're numbered and filed under strict market regulations. Otherwise it's only crystalized carbon. My bet is that if BTC continues to lie around within the next decade it would be -literally- priceless. If you'll own them you won't want to sell them at any price fiat money can give you.
So; one might ask: "How will the world go around?"
Here's a thought: More "strict" money will have to be made. Litecoin is a nice example. Less valued, more to float around, but no one can make them out of thin air too. This will have to be the next lower step towards BTC exchange value. Fiat money will continue to float too. But they will have less value than today (as it's been done since 1930's).
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Chaos could be a form of intelligence we cannot yet understand its complexity.
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axilla
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October 10, 2012, 02:45:43 PM |
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it really depends on what it can be spent on... If more real business adopt the use of BTC's then we'll see the demand increase. Really the price is only going to go as high as it is manipulated due to the small liquidity of it all, or as high as it can based on demand. Just like any other market.
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