Bitcoin Forum
November 09, 2024, 08:53:27 PM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 28.0 [Torrent]
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register More  
Pages: « 1 [2]  All
  Print  
Author Topic: Declarative smart contracts in Byteball  (Read 17550 times)
dfd1
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 126
Merit: 100


View Profile
March 19, 2017, 11:36:00 PM
 #21

...
Lol.

Looks like Byteball attracted its own trolls. Probably Come-from-Beyonds sockpuppets.
I want to know dev opinion on this. He know for sure how genesis block was generated and how new coins can or can not be made. And dev comes here sometimes.

Yeah, right. If you want to know dev opinion, good way to start is to write in his thread that what he does is a shit toy and nonsense. Nice try. Don't give up, keep trying.

Some bored guy made javascript coin. It's suddenly not a toy?
thebatletbet
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 588
Merit: 500


View Profile
March 19, 2017, 11:48:33 PM
 #22

how much round in distribution byteball coin
iam hear in month april 2017 can open distribution bytball coin again in round 4
and how much in total suply, distribution only linked bitcoin addres or can mining too
SatoNatomato
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 378
Merit: 250


View Profile
March 20, 2017, 12:10:50 AM
 #23

how much round in distribution byteball coin
iam hear in month april 2017 can open distribution bytball coin again in round 4
and how much in total suply, distribution only linked bitcoin addres or can mining too
This is not the general Byteball thread, go there https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1608859

Distributions happen every full moon. Check byteball.org
SatoNatomato
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 378
Merit: 250


View Profile
March 20, 2017, 12:12:45 AM
 #24

...
Lol.

Looks like Byteball attracted its own trolls. Probably Come-from-Beyonds sockpuppets.
I want to know dev opinion on this. He know for sure how genesis block was generated and how new coins can or can not be made. And dev comes here sometimes.

Yeah, right. If you want to know dev opinion, good way to start is to write in his thread that what he does is a shit toy and nonsense. Nice try. Don't give up, keep trying.

Some bored guy made javascript coin. It's suddenly not a toy?
Do not use it, you can keep using other coins and avoid javascript software.

I suggest you begin with not visiting bitcointalk.org anymore as it contains javascript, and the Chrome or Firefox web-browsers as they contain an even heavier javascript interpreter and possibly even with Just-in-Time-compilation. That would be great, thanks!
dfd1
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 126
Merit: 100


View Profile
March 20, 2017, 12:51:32 AM
 #25


I suggest you begin with not visiting bitcointalk.org anymore as it contains javascript, and the Chrome or Firefox web-browsers as they contain an even heavier javascript interpreter and possibly even with Just-in-Time-compilation. That would be great, thanks!

Why so salty?
It's not contains javascript, it's a javascript app.
Like webtorrent. Webtorrent useless, but cool technology, with some flaws. So do byteball. Just put little "proudly written in javascript, highly experimental technology" warning on website, don't be so shy.
Some people don't see what's going on in their wallet and can confuse it with some more traditional thing. Javascript is fine as long as people warned about it. Sure I can left bitcointalk.org, but how it will change byteball code?
SatoNatomato
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 378
Merit: 250


View Profile
March 20, 2017, 11:58:39 AM
 #26


I suggest you begin with not visiting bitcointalk.org anymore as it contains javascript, and the Chrome or Firefox web-browsers as they contain an even heavier javascript interpreter and possibly even with Just-in-Time-compilation. That would be great, thanks!

Why so salty?
It's not contains javascript, it's a javascript app.
Like webtorrent. Webtorrent useless, but cool technology, with some flaws. So do byteball. Just put little "proudly written in javascript, highly experimental technology" warning on website, don't be so shy.
Some people don't see what's going on in their wallet and can confuse it with some more traditional thing. Javascript is fine as long as people warned about it. Sure I can left bitcointalk.org, but how it will change byteball code?
Not salty, just telling you the absurdity of criticising javascript from safety and software security perspectives, when C and C++... well. I dont even know why I bother.

Actually you arent even criticising javascript on any technical point you're just parroting nonsense, FUDding.
Fatoshi
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 672
Merit: 251



View Profile
March 20, 2017, 12:16:15 PM
 #27

...
Lol.

Looks like Byteball attracted its own trolls. Probably Come-from-Beyonds sockpuppets.

Interesting coincidence. I was playing with writing style analyzer yesterday and found another account of Qora developer. You could use this technique to compare my style and style of dfd1...



What software did you use?

dfd1
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 126
Merit: 100


View Profile
March 20, 2017, 01:15:25 PM
Last edit: March 20, 2017, 01:29:45 PM by dfd1
 #28


Actually you arent even criticising javascript on any technical point you're just parroting nonsense, FUDding.
No problem, just ask.
JavaScript applications consume too much resources like memory and cryptocurrency is not a light type of software. Some months will pass and you will see how node can't be run on an average computer.
SatoNatomato
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 378
Merit: 250


View Profile
March 20, 2017, 01:59:17 PM
 #29


Actually you arent even criticising javascript on any technical point you're just parroting nonsense, FUDding.
No problem, just ask.
JavaScript applications consume too much resources like memory and cryptocurrency is not a light type of software. Some months will pass and you will see how node can't be run on an average computer.
Oh, I see you dont know the words you are attempting to talk with. Hilarious.
dfd1
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 126
Merit: 100


View Profile
March 20, 2017, 02:25:38 PM
 #30


Actually you arent even criticising javascript on any technical point you're just parroting nonsense, FUDding.
No problem, just ask.
JavaScript applications consume too much resources like memory and cryptocurrency is not a light type of software. Some months will pass and you will see how node can't be run on an average computer.
Oh, I see you dont know the words you are attempting to talk with. Hilarious.

Oh, I see an ad hominem. Go fuck yourself, I don't want to spend my time on retard and his personal suckpuppet troll account.
iamnotback
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 336
Merit: 265



View Profile
March 20, 2017, 03:55:04 PM
 #31

JavaScript applications consume too much resources like memory and cryptocurrency is not a light type of software. Some months will pass and you will see how node can't be run on an average computer.

Research roughly approximates that GC requires 5X the memory of explict memory allocation to achieve the same performance, 3X to lose only 17% performance, and 2X to lose 70% performance.

However as I had explained in a discussion with @jl777 last year, we can code in JavaScript with explicit memory allocation by employing an ArrayBuffer heap as Emscripten does for transpiling C to JavaScript and with certain compile-time semantics other optimizations may be possible.

Also explicit refcounting has performance tradeoffs also.
Come-from-Beyond
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2142
Merit: 1010

Newbie


View Profile
March 20, 2017, 07:58:41 PM
 #32

What software did you use?

My own, I have been using it for several years already. There are also sites where you need just to copy-paste the texts and wait a little.
innergy
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 685
Merit: 500


View Profile
April 05, 2017, 07:56:32 PM
 #33

Version 1.7.0 released https://github.com/byteball/byteball/releases

This version enables prediction markets based on P2P smart contracts. See https://medium.com/byteball/making-p2p-great-again-episode-iii-prediction-markets-f40d49c0abab



Now you can bet on (or hedge against) any events and get paid if the event happens.  One type of events that is already working today is events based on exchange rates of crypto coins and major fiat currencies. 

You are welcome to add new oracles that post other real-world events and enable prediction markets based on these events.

Other updates:
* New translations thanks to community members: Hungarian, Swedish, Polish.  Dutch translation improved.
* Multiple small improvements and bugfixes

If you are running a full wallet, the upgrade is mandatory.  The new version extends the smart contract language.  As soon as the new language constructs are used for the fist time, old nodes will not recognize them and will be stuck until upgraded.
dfd1
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 126
Merit: 100


View Profile
April 05, 2017, 08:11:51 PM
 #34

Version 1.7.0 released https://github.com/byteball/byteball/releases

This version enables prediction markets based on P2P smart contracts. See https://medium.com/byteball/making-p2p-great-again-episode-iii-prediction-markets-f40d49c0abab



Now you can bet on (or hedge against) any events and get paid if the event happens.  One type of events that is already working today is events based on exchange rates of crypto coins and major fiat currencies. 

You are welcome to add new oracles that post other real-world events and enable prediction markets based on these events.

Other updates:
* New translations thanks to community members: Hungarian, Swedish, Polish.  Dutch translation improved.
* Multiple small improvements and bugfixes

If you are running a full wallet, the upgrade is mandatory.  The new version extends the smart contract language.  As soon as the new language constructs are used for the fist time, old nodes will not recognize them and will be stuck until upgraded.

Just put this shit on every thread you see here, don't be shy.
innergy
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 685
Merit: 500


View Profile
April 05, 2017, 08:41:27 PM
 #35

Did you read the topic.. up there on the first page?
Pages: « 1 [2]  All
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!