Television
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October 28, 2015, 04:01:23 AM |
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If more people were technically inclined then Bitcoin would be growing at a much faster rate. It's just unfortunate that most people don't care about innovative technology and the good that can come out of it, at least not until they are given a reason to care.
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zircon
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October 28, 2015, 05:46:14 AM |
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I've said it before but I will say it again: I really believe that merchants follow customers, not the other way around.
Added to this, the barrier for entry for merchants is very low. Either open a wallet and get free transactions or go with a BitPay who make everything simple and easy for you for 1% (far lower than VISA etc).
The barrier for entry is not merchants adopting it. Merchants chase money, and they will get familiar quickly with whatever he customer wants.
Once you have customers who can get hold of Bitcoin easily, trust it, and understand it then in my view everything else will follow.
I am working on this, and so are many people - but I think it is important for people to realise that this is perhaps the key event - this is one of, if not the killer app in Bitcoin. Many people say well, we cannot have everyone paying for coffee in Bitcoin. Don't worry about that. That will sort itself out.
What we need is for everyone to have some small amount of Bitcoin, even 10 USD each just to fiddle with - and then it will grow imo.
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Soros Shorts
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October 28, 2015, 07:12:36 AM |
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Careful, you might prompt some nutjobs to lecture us all on the evils of permanently storing cups of coffee in the holy ledger. Coffee is fine. Even scrap payments of 0.005 BTC is OK. Just don't complain about the fees.
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christycalhoun
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October 28, 2015, 09:04:02 AM |
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Too bad I dont have any local bitcoin accepting shops in my area to try that out.
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Bitcoininspace
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October 28, 2015, 09:06:46 AM |
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Actually this is nothing comparing to btc becoming real money above all other. I mean they still see btc as fraud or something like pseudo-money. It is not. It is all real money.
It will take the masses some time to adjust to what btc really is and what it will be able to do in the future, in the meantime consider yourself lucky you are still one of the few people in the world who know about it and can buy into it still. I hope I'll live to tell my grandkids that I was one of the early adopters of btc even though I heard about it in 2014 first.
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Q7
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October 28, 2015, 01:07:20 PM |
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Sounds cool. Putting forward a real life example and getting people to see it themselves is obviously much better than spending countless hours trying to convince people with the same message and repeating non stop. In the end a far simpler approach is much more effective.
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gentlemand
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Welt Am Draht
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October 28, 2015, 02:15:35 PM |
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Best to attempt your first bitcoin transaction in a place well used to it. I've heard a few tales of folks having to educate the guy behind the counter.
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Kprawn
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October 28, 2015, 02:20:49 PM |
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So my friend was in Canada and it was really cold, none of his friends had change, he had some Bitcoin in his phone. Happened to find a place where they would accept BTC. He bought some coffees and warm chocolate and invited all of his friends with it. A quick payment into the guy's Bitcoin address which was printed in a piece of paper, delivered a nice breakfast for him and all his friends. Then they understood how Bitcoin is money no matter what others might say. They stopped seeing it as some geek weird thing. I think using Bitcoin in real life in return of some useful service in front of clueless guys that still think it's not real money, is a great way to teach them how Bitcoin is very real and the real party hasn't even begun yet. Thats why we must never forget about the importance of small transactions like those. Buying some coffee in exchange of Bitcoin impressed them more than any of the revolutionary protocol tech stuff you could explain them.
I had the same experience on a lunch appointment with some clients. I took them out for lunch and I paid with Bitcoin. They were very amazed and intrigued and we extended the lunch to talk about Bitcoin. I helped them to setup a wallet and transferred some coins to them and to thank me, they paid with Bitcoin for some desert. Out of the three of them, two still use their wallet regularly. { I still have their Bitcoin addresses, because I transferred coins to their wallets, so I can check up on them } Im really amazed with both of your story. What a nice place there. Directly accepting bitcoin in some of your physical stores there just like how fiat is moving. Hope someday my country will have that too. Even bitcoin debit card are not accepted here afaik. The only good thing here there are lots of online merchants here accepting bitcoin and converting our btc's to fiat is just one click away. Hope physical store here are will adopt bitcoin payment too. Merchants will not start accepting Bitcoin if people do not ask for it. The problem is... people will not ask for it, if they do not know about it. It is our task to educate them and to get them to buy some. I also saw this predicament and decided to concentrate on individual people at first, but it went to slowly. I then mastered the art to demonstrate Bitcoin to people in small groups.. I now take on small groups of between 5 to 10 people at a time and I have a +/- 50 to 60% success rating. It makes it easier if they are in a informal setting like a bar or a pub.
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franky1
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October 28, 2015, 02:29:35 PM |
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I've said it before but I will say it again: I really believe that merchants follow customers, not the other way around.
Added to this, the barrier for entry for merchants is very low. Either open a wallet and get free transactions or go with a BitPay who make everything simple and easy for you for 1% (far lower than VISA etc).
The barrier for entry is not merchants adopting it. Merchants chase money, and they will get familiar quickly with whatever he customer wants.
Once you have customers who can get hold of Bitcoin easily, trust it, and understand it then in my view everything else will follow.
I am working on this, and so are many people - but I think it is important for people to realise that this is perhaps the key event - this is one of, if not the killer app in Bitcoin. Many people say well, we cannot have everyone paying for coffee in Bitcoin. Don't worry about that. That will sort itself out.
What we need is for everyone to have some small amount of Bitcoin, even 10 USD each just to fiddle with - and then it will grow imo.
nah.. for instance.. shops did not wait until customers demand for applepay before they accepted it.. instead applepay went out and got businesses to accept it before actually launching applepay to customers. bitpay/coinbase has atleast 100,000 merchants signed up. and bitpay needs to advertise these 100,000 businesses more, just like apple pay has to tell customers how great using the payment system is. yes smaller businesses will then come onboard later as the customerbase using the payment system increases.. but there is no point trying to teach 1billion people about bitcoin if there are only 100,000 locations to use it.. we need to get more of the national and international retailers that people use everyday to be onboard first. then the customers will follow. followed by the smaller independant stores. this 'chicken&egg' discussion has been going in circles for years, and the short answer is that its far easier to talk to 1 million businesses then it is to talk to 1 billion customers. not only based on less number of ears to whisper to.. but also because 1 billion customers will ignore it if they cant find a single shop in their town that it can be used on. so get the shops onboard first and the customers will follow
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I DO NOT TRADE OR ACT AS ESCROW ON THIS FORUM EVER. Please do your own research & respect what is written here as both opinion & information gleaned from experience. many people replying with insults but no on-topic content substance, automatically are 'facepalmed' and yawned at
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neurotypical
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October 28, 2015, 03:23:05 PM |
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Careful, you might prompt some nutjobs to lecture us all on the evils of permanently storing cups of coffee in the holy ledger. Coffee is fine. Even scrap payments of 0.005 BTC is OK. Just don't complain about the fees. Well, let's say in 10 years Bitcoin is widely used worldwide. What would the fee be for a cup of coffee? Because if it's too high no one will use it for such payments which is a shame. Of course, that's where LN would solve things to make it cheaper, but it's not "inside the chain". It doesn't feel like "real Bitcoin" or something. But I also don't see any other solutions for this problem. Centralized nodes is a worst case scenario.
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RodeoX
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The revolution will be monetized!
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October 28, 2015, 03:27:49 PM |
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That jives with my experience also. A lot of my coworkers thought of bitcoin as something not understandable for most people. When some of them saw me buy something at lunch, it suddenly became money.
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dothebeats
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October 28, 2015, 03:32:50 PM |
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This is true. Now, bitcoiners just need more places to be able to pay with BTC
Which is kinda lacking in the economy. We need more merchants to accept bitcoin as is and more big companies to get aboard this train for that to happen! Simple startups won't always do the cut for us to get that global adoption.
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Laketear
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October 30, 2015, 09:19:50 AM |
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Well, let's say in 10 years Bitcoin is widely used worldwide. What would the fee be for a cup of coffee? Because if it's too high no one will use it for such payments which is a shame. Of course, that's where LN would solve things to make it cheaper, but it's not "inside the chain". It doesn't feel like "real Bitcoin" or something. But I also don't see any other solutions for this problem. Centralized nodes is a worst case scenario.
Bitcoin will be many forms in the future for it to be transacted instantly. Lighting Network or side chain are one of them. But they are still bitcoins.
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Blue_Tiger73
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October 30, 2015, 09:39:38 AM |
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Then they understood how Bitcoin is money no matter what others might say. They stopped seeing it as some geek weird thing. I think using Bitcoin in real life in return of some useful service in front of clueless guys that still think it's not real money, is a great way to teach them how Bitcoin is very real and the real party hasn't even begun yet. Thats why we must never forget about the importance of small transactions like those. Buying some coffee in exchange of Bitcoin impressed them more than any of the revolutionary protocol tech stuff you could explain them.
I totally agree. People have the wrong impression of bitcoin. They need to realise that bitcoin isn't some kind of foreign currency, it is a cryptocurrency that is going to be the future.
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e1ghtSpace
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Crypto since 2014
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October 30, 2015, 11:01:14 AM |
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So my friend was in Canada and it was really cold, none of his friends had change, he had some Bitcoin in his phone. Happened to find a place where they would accept BTC. He bought some coffees and warm chocolate and invited all of his friends with it. A quick payment into the guy's Bitcoin address which was printed in a piece of paper, delivered a nice breakfast for him and all his friends. Then they understood how Bitcoin is money no matter what others might say. They stopped seeing it as some geek weird thing. I think using Bitcoin in real life in return of some useful service in front of clueless guys that still think it's not real money, is a great way to teach them how Bitcoin is very real and the real party hasn't even begun yet. Thats why we must never forget about the importance of small transactions like those. Buying some coffee in exchange of Bitcoin impressed them more than any of the revolutionary protocol tech stuff you could explain them.
One day I wish my school cafeteria would accept bitcoin, but I think we're a long way away from that. Most of my friends don't understand Bitcoin and think it is just some fake currency that can be hacked. Maybe in the future they'll wish they asked more about it.
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ranochigo
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Crypto Swap Exchange
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October 30, 2015, 11:14:51 AM |
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This is a great example of ways to introduce people to Bitcoin. The main problem is still the amount of places which accept it as a payment method. Usually, online stores would give a rebate when using it. However, there is very few stores which accept Bitcoin in real life hence most would charge a premium for it. Most people imagine Bitcoin as something complicated but it is as easy at scanning a Qr code and hitting the send button.
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zimmah
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October 30, 2015, 02:06:23 PM |
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So my friend was in Canada and it was really cold, none of his friends had change, he had some Bitcoin in his phone. Happened to find a place where they would accept BTC. He bought some coffees and warm chocolate and invited all of his friends with it. A quick payment into the guy's Bitcoin address which was printed in a piece of paper, delivered a nice breakfast for him and all his friends. Then they understood how Bitcoin is money no matter what others might say. They stopped seeing it as some geek weird thing. I think using Bitcoin in real life in return of some useful service in front of clueless guys that still think it's not real money, is a great way to teach them how Bitcoin is very real and the real party hasn't even begun yet. Thats why we must never forget about the importance of small transactions like those. Buying some coffee in exchange of Bitcoin impressed them more than any of the revolutionary protocol tech stuff you could explain them.
people are thought that fiat currency = money. and anything else isn't. this is wrong, and this is a scam, they do this so they can rob all your wealth off you and give you worthless paper notes in return, and make you think you got the good end of the deal. anything you can use to pay for services is as good a currency as fiat, anything that is hard to reproduce is even better than fiat currency. Fiat currency isn't even money, gold is money, silver is money, quality pearls can be money, and crypto can be money.
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maokoto
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October 30, 2015, 03:11:11 PM |
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This is true. Now, bitcoiners just need more places to be able to pay with BTC
Just this^^ Buying something in front of people using bitcoin will convince them. Problem is that there are many many places in which you cannot buy anything directly in BTC. At least here in Spain.
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tiggytomb
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October 30, 2015, 03:23:01 PM |
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This is true, when people can see that you can actually pay for something that you would normally pay for with cash then their interest is spiked, I have seen it in a couple of people where they finally kind of get it. More places to spend bitcoin will spark more interest.
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dothebeats
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October 30, 2015, 03:25:50 PM |
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This is a great example of ways to introduce people to Bitcoin. The main problem is still the amount of places which accept it as a payment method. Usually, online stores would give a rebate when using it. However, there is very few stores which accept Bitcoin in real life hence most would charge a premium for it. Most people imagine Bitcoin as something complicated but it is as easy at scanning a Qr code and hitting the send button.
Most store owners still can't find the incentive of using/accepting bitcoins for their merchandise or service, thinking that it would only leave them with a payment that can go to 0 within some days. Also, to be able to maintain a business in the current times, store owners should still stay with fiat given that not all the necessities in setting up a business can be paid with bitcoins. People are willing to pay, the problem is, the owners don't want what they are being paid.
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