flibbr (OP)
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April 03, 2013, 06:35:06 PM Last edit: December 10, 2018, 09:35:01 AM by flibbr |
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moni3z
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April 03, 2013, 06:36:24 PM |
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Fees 0 BTC
Should've thrown at least a satoshi in there
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battmann
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I am a student of programming and design.
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April 03, 2013, 06:55:25 PM |
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I did the same thing yesterday, it sucks but it will go through. Always put at least BTC0.0005 as the miner fee so there is a reason for people to confirm.
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Dr.Steve
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April 03, 2013, 08:02:58 PM |
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looks like small transaction fees need to part of the process if you want it done fast.
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tysat
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Keep it real
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April 03, 2013, 08:10:38 PM |
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looks like small transaction fees need to part of the process if you want it done fast.
Yup, that's how bitcoin works.
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opentoe
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Personal text my ass....
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April 03, 2013, 08:31:47 PM |
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Fees 0 BTC
Should've thrown at least a satoshi in there
How can you actually tell there was a fee included or not? I'm having the same issue. http://blockchain.info/fb/1hysymx
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opentoe
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Personal text my ass....
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April 03, 2013, 08:55:33 PM |
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Ahh, ok. I got it. I just did the same thing for mine and there is no fee. So that's what is happening. Thanks, I never knew I could look that up.
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opentoe
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Personal text my ass....
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April 03, 2013, 09:09:08 PM |
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Is there anyway to add a fee to that transaction so it can be "pushed" somehow?
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tysat
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Keep it real
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April 03, 2013, 11:10:57 PM |
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Is there anyway to add a fee to that transaction so it can be "pushed" somehow?
I don't believe so, but I'm not well versed in the super technical aspects of bitcoin. There's not an easy way to do it.
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battmann
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April 04, 2013, 12:48:02 AM |
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Is there anyway to add a fee to that transaction so it can be "pushed" somehow?
I think that its possible for the owner of a mining 'pool' to push a transaction through, but its rough and admin type work. So what you have to do is just wait it out. It WILL come through, but sometimes even if you add a mining fee the transaction gets "stripped" of its fee because of some bug or another random happenstance. Ehh, such is life. In the mean time wondering what time means.
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norman
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April 04, 2013, 02:19:44 AM |
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Wow. I feel lucky. I had one outgoing from mtgox today that say for about 10 hours. It just went through.
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opentoe
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Personal text my ass....
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April 04, 2013, 07:44:35 AM |
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Is there anyway to add a fee to that transaction so it can be "pushed" somehow?
I think that its possible for the owner of a mining 'pool' to push a transaction through, but its rough and admin type work. So what you have to do is just wait it out. It WILL come through, but sometimes even if you add a mining fee the transaction gets "stripped" of its fee because of some bug or another random happenstance. Ehh, such is life. In the mean time wondering what time means. I had to wait about 6 or 7 hours. The service I used to buy the bitcoin got a hold of the mining pool that had the transaction and somehow was able to get the transaction confirmed. I'm curious as to how you can tell which mining pool has the transaction. In the end, it worked out ok and I only had to wait a little bit.
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BookLover
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April 06, 2013, 01:13:56 PM |
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I don't get why everyone seems to have so much trouble with this. I sent less than 0.5 BTC with no fee and it confirmed on the next block. I guess "aged" wallets without a lot of dust transactions have a lot higher priority and don't need a fee.
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lucb1e
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April 06, 2013, 03:49:48 PM |
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Since when are fees required? Well not required, but since when is it customary to send. I thought transactions were free under two conditions (size limit and a minimum amount; they're somewhere on the bitcoin.it wiki). You earn $3500 for a single block, why do we need to charge fees now?
And I also wonder how miners set this. Miner clients (or pool software) just has a configurable setting for the minimum fee or so?
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DannyHamilton
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April 06, 2013, 04:50:14 PM |
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You earn $3500 for a single block, why do we need to charge fees now?
If there are 4,000 unconfirmed transactions, and you can fit 800 transactions in the block you are working on, which 800 do you choose? Only seems fair to give priority to those who voluntarily paid a transaction fee. The rest can wait.
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Welsh
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April 06, 2013, 08:41:01 PM Last edit: June 01, 2014, 12:17:11 PM by Welsh |
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Since when are fees required? Well not required, but since when is it customary to send. I thought transactions were free under two conditions (size limit and a minimum amount; they're somewhere on the bitcoin.it wiki). You earn $3500 for a single block, why do we need to charge fees now?
And I also wonder how miners set this. Miner clients (or pool software) just has a configurable setting for the minimum fee or so?
A fee is not required, However it is highly recommended if you want your transaction to be dealt with soon. For example, if you ran a business and some people donated and some didn't. Who would you help first? Maybe you would help the person who went first, but Bitcoin has many transactions a day. Putting a small fee increases the likely hood of it getting 'dealt' with sooner rather than later.
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lucb1e
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April 06, 2013, 10:18:44 PM |
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You earn $3500 for a single block, why do we need to charge fees now?
If there are 4,000 unconfirmed transactions, and you can fit 800 transactions in the block you are working on, which 800 do you choose? Only seems fair to give priority to those who voluntarily paid a transaction fee. The rest can wait. You can fit only 800 transactions in one block? Is this because of the 0.7 bug (with the too big block that caused two chains)? A fee is not required. However if you ran a business and some people donated and some didn't. Who would you help first? Maybe you would help the person who went first, but bitcoin has many transactions a day. Putting a small fee increases the time sent.
I thought you could just process all unconfirmed transactions at once; put them all in one block.
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DannyHamilton
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April 06, 2013, 10:28:40 PM |
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You can fit only 800 transactions in one block? Is this because of the 0.7 bug (with the too big block that caused two chains)? - snip - I thought you could just process all unconfirmed transactions at once; put them all in one block.
How many transactions you can fit in a block depends on the size of the transactions that you choose. Right now bitcoin is coded to only accept blocks that are less than 1 megabyte in size, furthermore most miners are self limiting to something smaller (I can't remember if it is 256 kB or 500 kB?). The 1 mega byte limit has existed for a long time, and there hasn't yet been any change to that in any recent release of the client.
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lucb1e
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April 06, 2013, 11:08:04 PM |
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Okay, that explains a lot. I guess the limit is in place for ratelimiting purposes, so that a huge block couldn't overload the network (miners and clients) with lots of data? Or so that the block is uploaded and propagated faster, and they have a bigger chance of getting the block reward?
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