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Question: What happens first:
New ATH - 43 (69.4%)
<$60,000 - 19 (30.6%)
Total Voters: 62

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Author Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion  (Read 26386488 times)
This is a self-moderated topic. If you do not want to be moderated by the person who started this topic, create a new topic. (174 posts by 3 users with 9 merit deleted.)
JorgeStolfi
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August 06, 2014, 09:26:26 PM

Here's an analogy specifically crafted for the ageing brain, hehehe...
Why, thanks!   Grin And here is a parabolic fable for you:

In 1903 the Wright brothers flew their first aeroplane, the Wright Flyer I, and Scientific American published a paper about it.  Some young mechanics nerds became excited by the invention, built some replicas of the plane and started playing with them. They predicted that the Flyer would radically change the way people moved and lived, e.g. by flying through coffee shops and picking up their drinks with special hooks,  or flying through their friends' windows at Christmas instead of sending them postcards.

Then some libertarians realized that a Flyer would be handy to carry away their "dirty" cash when the police came knocking, and so they all started buying Flyers from the nerds.  Drug dealers then thought that the machine could be used to smuggle drugs across the Rio Grande, and started buying them by the hundreds too.

Then several Wright Flyer dealerships opened in China, and the Chinese started buying them like crazy. 

Each of these surges in demand drove the price up by 10x.  Seeing that, other people realized that they could become filthy rich by investing in Flyers.  They calculated that if, in the future, only 10% of the people who then traveled by horse would use a Flyer instead, each plane (which they could still buy for a few thousand dollars) would be worth millions.  This thought drove many people crazy, and they invested all their worth, and then some more, in those machines. 

The 1000% per year growth of Wright Flyer price then attracted troves of finance businessmen and venture capitalists. Soon they were offering hundreds of financial instruments and services based on it -- such as bonds backed by fleets of Wright Flyers that their owners wanted to get rid of, and services that would exchange Flyers for horses, for Flyer owners who needed to go where planes could not land (which, at that time, was pretty much everywhere).

There were some setbacks, for sure; like when the feds seized a huge fleet of Flyers from a drug cartel, when the Chinese government prohibited any use of Flyers that involved flying, and when thousands of investors lost half a billion dollars buying non-existent Flyers from a Japanese dealer.  Those and other mishaps caused the plane's price to drop somewhat; but, by that time, thousands of enthusiasts had become firmly convinced that the Wright Flyer I was the means of transportation of the future, and continued to believe in its longterm appreciation.   (They actualy welcomed the temporary price drop, since it allowed them to buy more Flyers with their strained paychecks.)

Meanwhile, many inventors (including, some suspect, the Wright brothers themselves) had been busy developing bigger, better, safer, faster aeroplanes.  But Wright Flyer I enthusiasts scorned them.  They pointed out that those competing designs were just minor variations of the basic idea, and did not have the extensive network of repair shops and part suppliers of their original model, nor the public confidence that it had accrued in those four years since it was invented, nor the mllions that had been invested in ventures and services based on it.  They were certain that, in a few months, those alternative designs would fail and would be forgotten, while the Wright Flyers that they had piled up in their backyards would continue to grow in value, 10x every year.   

And they laughed at some pessimists who predicted that governments might one day regulate aircraft and air travel ("Ha! How can they enforce regulations on machines that can fly away from them?"), ban the Wright Flyer I from the skies, or even use aircraft to expand their power, e.g. by using them to chase drug smugglers and spy into people's private land.

I do not know what happened next, but surely time must have vindicated those Wright Flyer I enthusiasts.  Grin
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August 06, 2014, 09:27:44 PM



At least it is not so flat. I like what I see because seems nicely shaking before the rally :]

Red candles means nothing for my bullish feelings.
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August 06, 2014, 09:28:25 PM

Selling all your BTC weeks before the ETF opens, hoping to buy back 2% cheaper. TRADING LIKE A BOSS!
ubercool
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August 06, 2014, 09:31:34 PM

Selling all your BTC weeks before the ETF opens, hoping to buy back 2% cheaper. TRADING LIKE A BOSS!

When ETF will be laucnch they will buy surely, so I don't think it will be good idea for selling at that time.
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August 06, 2014, 09:32:41 PM

Selling all your BTC weeks before the ETF opens, hoping to buy back 2% cheaper. TRADING LIKE A BOSS!

When EFT opens, price will bubble up to 595, and then crash to 570. It's no longer volatile, it's lol-atile.
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August 06, 2014, 09:33:16 PM

Here's an analogy specifically crafted for the ageing brain, hehehe...
Why, thanks!   Grin And here is a parabolic fable for you:

In 1903 the Wright brothers flew their first aeroplane, the Wright Flyer I, and Scientific American published a paper about it.  Some young mechanics nerds became excited by the invention, built some replicas of the plane and started playing with them. They predicted that the Flyer would radically change the way people moved and lived, e.g. by flying through coffee shops and picking up their drinks with special hooks,  or flying through their friends' windows at Christmas instead of sending them postcards.

Then some libertarians realized that a Flyer would be handy to carry away their "dirty" cash when the police came knocking, and so they all started buying Flyers from the nerds.  Drug dealers then thought that the machine could be used to smuggle drugs across the Rio Grande, and started buying them by the hundreds too.

Then several Wright Flyer dealerships opened in China, and the Chinese started buying them like crazy. 

Each of these surges in demand drove the price up by 10x.  Seeing that, other people realized that they could become filthy rich by investing in Flyers.  They calculated that if, in the future, only 10% of the people who then traveled by horse would use a Flyer instead, each plane (which they could still buy for a few thousand dollars) would be worth millions.  This thought drove many people crazy, and they invested all their worth, and then some more, in those machines. 

The 1000% per year growth of Wright Flyer price then attracted troves of finance businessmen and venture capitalists. Soon they were offering hundreds of financial instruments and services based on it -- such as bonds backed by fleets of Wright Flyers that their owners wanted to get rid of, and services that would exchange Flyers for horses, for Flyer owners who needed to go where planes could not land (which, at that time, was pretty much everywhere).

There were some setbacks, for sure; like when the feds seized a huge fleet of Flyers from a drug cartel, when the Chinese government prohibited any use of Flyers that involved flying, and when thousands of investors lost half a billion dollars buying non-existent Flyers from a Japanese dealer.  Those and other mishaps caused the plane's price to drop somewhat; but, by that time, thousands of enthusiasts had become firmly convinced that the Wright Flyer I was the means of transportation of the future, and continued to believe in its longterm appreciation.   (They actualy welcomed the temporary price drop, since it allowed them to buy more Flyers with their strained paychecks.)

Meanwhile, many inventors (including, some suspect, the Wright brothers themselves) had been busy developing bigger, better, safer, faster aeroplanes.  But Wright Flyer I enthusiasts scorned them.  They pointed out that those competing designs were just minor variations of the basic idea, and did not have the extensive network of repair shops and part suppliers of their original model, nor the public confidence that it had accrued in those four years since it was invented, nor the mllions that had been invested in ventures and services based on it.  They were certain that, in a few months, those alternative designs would fail and would be forgotten, while the Wright Flyers that they had piled up in their backyards would continue to grow in value, 10x every year.   

And they laughed at some pessimists who predicted that governments might one day regulate aircraft and air travel ("Ha! How can they enforce regulations on machines that can fly away from them?"), ban the Wright Flyer I from the skies, or even use aircraft to expand their power, e.g. by using them to chase drug smugglers and spy into people's private land.

I do not know what happened next, but surely time must have vindicated those Wright Flyer I enthusiasts.  Grin

This is just awesome ! Cheesy What a beautiful story, personally i can't wait to read what happens next to the Wright Flyer I. I hope you re gonna finish your story soon with a happy end.
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August 06, 2014, 09:33:35 PM

1 BTC BMW!!!!1 Grin


the best thing that a bitcoin can buy Smiley
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August 06, 2014, 09:34:09 PM



-> http://vimeo.com/98907025
fonzie
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August 06, 2014, 09:34:47 PM

Selling all your BTC weeks before the ETF opens, hoping to buy back 2% cheaper. TRADING LIKE A BOSS!

When EFT opens, price will bubble up to 595, and then crash to 570. It's no longer volatile, it's lol-atile.


 Cheesy Cheesy Cheesy
ChartBuddy
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August 06, 2014, 09:59:53 PM


Explanation
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August 06, 2014, 10:00:45 PM

What's this? Another petty pump attempt? - I can't believe I'm actually coming to the Wall Observer when a $2 rise happens. The BTC price really needs to get its act together!
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August 06, 2014, 10:10:52 PM

I feel a disturbance...
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August 06, 2014, 10:29:10 PM

Here's an analogy specifically crafted for the ageing brain, hehehe...
Why, thanks!   Grin And here is a parabolic fable for you:

I actually enjoyed the story. It reminded me a lot of the credit card story: Some guy wanted a better way to pay for meals out, invents a Diners club (credit) card. Everyone sings it's praises, and people find many more uses for the card, until everything is paid for with the card. Then technology passed it by and it was replaced by a slightly more... oh wait... No, it stuck around another 65 years...

Also, you left out the part of the Wright Flyer story where all Wright Flyer I's were equipped with a neural consensus network which constantly monitored the desires of their owners. Whenever a new flyer came to market, the Wright Flyer would assimilate any of it's positive traits, if the majority of Wright Flyer owners desired it to be so.

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August 06, 2014, 10:35:15 PM

Here's an analogy specifically crafted for the ageing brain, hehehe...
Why, thanks!   Grin And here is a parabolic fable for you:

[...]

I do not know what happened next, but surely time must have vindicated those Wright Flyer I enthusiasts.  Grin

I like the story.

And its conclusion: maybe you're not on board with Bitcoin, but you see the value of cryptos in principle... I'm okay with that. Bitcoin is just the currently strongest contender. I'm not nearly as committed to btc as I am committed to cryptocurrencies Smiley
SirChiko
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August 06, 2014, 10:35:50 PM

We've seen some interesting volume today, didn't we?!
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August 06, 2014, 10:37:43 PM

We've seen some interesting volume today, didn't we?!
It actually did go up! You can even see it on the 6m graphs now. Even after the mini-rallye was finished, there was some volume going on. It's almost like someone put the volume-button back to 'on'. We'll have to see whether this trend remains, though!
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August 06, 2014, 10:45:33 PM

Here's an analogy specifically crafted for the ageing brain, hehehe...
Why, thanks!   Grin And here is a parabolic fable for you:

In 1903 the Wright brothers flew their first aeroplane, the Wright Flyer I, and Scientific American published a paper about it.  Some young mechanics nerds became excited by the invention, built some replicas of the plane and started playing with them. They predicted that the Flyer would radically change the way people moved and lived, e.g. by flying through coffee shops and picking up their drinks with special hooks,  or flying through their friends' windows at Christmas instead of sending them postcards.

Then some libertarians realized that a Flyer would be handy to carry away their "dirty" cash when the police came knocking, and so they all started buying Flyers from the nerds.  Drug dealers then thought that the machine could be used to smuggle drugs across the Rio Grande, and started buying them by the hundreds too.

Then several Wright Flyer dealerships opened in China, and the Chinese started buying them like crazy. 

Each of these surges in demand drove the price up by 10x.  Seeing that, other people realized that they could become filthy rich by investing in Flyers.  They calculated that if, in the future, only 10% of the people who then traveled by horse would use a Flyer instead, each plane (which they could still buy for a few thousand dollars) would be worth millions.  This thought drove many people crazy, and they invested all their worth, and then some more, in those machines. 

The 1000% per year growth of Wright Flyer price then attracted troves of finance businessmen and venture capitalists. Soon they were offering hundreds of financial instruments and services based on it -- such as bonds backed by fleets of Wright Flyers that their owners wanted to get rid of, and services that would exchange Flyers for horses, for Flyer owners who needed to go where planes could not land (which, at that time, was pretty much everywhere).

There were some setbacks, for sure; like when the feds seized a huge fleet of Flyers from a drug cartel, when the Chinese government prohibited any use of Flyers that involved flying, and when thousands of investors lost half a billion dollars buying non-existent Flyers from a Japanese dealer.  Those and other mishaps caused the plane's price to drop somewhat; but, by that time, thousands of enthusiasts had become firmly convinced that the Wright Flyer I was the means of transportation of the future, and continued to believe in its longterm appreciation.   (They actualy welcomed the temporary price drop, since it allowed them to buy more Flyers with their strained paychecks.)

Meanwhile, many inventors (including, some suspect, the Wright brothers themselves) had been busy developing bigger, better, safer, faster aeroplanes.  But Wright Flyer I enthusiasts scorned them.  They pointed out that those competing designs were just minor variations of the basic idea, and did not have the extensive network of repair shops and part suppliers of their original model, nor the public confidence that it had accrued in those four years since it was invented, nor the mllions that had been invested in ventures and services based on it.  They were certain that, in a few months, those alternative designs would fail and would be forgotten, while the Wright Flyers that they had piled up in their backyards would continue to grow in value, 10x every year.   

And they laughed at some pessimists who predicted that governments might one day regulate aircraft and air travel ("Ha! How can they enforce regulations on machines that can fly away from them?"), ban the Wright Flyer I from the skies, or even use aircraft to expand their power, e.g. by using them to chase drug smugglers and spy into people's private land.

I do not know what happened next, but surely time must have vindicated those Wright Flyer I enthusiasts.  Grin

What a piece of fiction that attempts to resemble some kind of basis in reality... ?  What does this fictional write-up have to do with bitcoin price and/or wall speculation(s)?
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August 06, 2014, 10:59:53 PM


Explanation
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August 06, 2014, 11:01:29 PM

http://cdn.meme.li/instances/500x/53359337.jpg
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August 06, 2014, 11:31:26 PM

Huobi has been holding 3600 with a vengeance..


Breakout soon plez  Roll Eyes
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