mvidetto
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November 21, 2013, 09:50:59 PM |
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Double top? Or possible retracement back up?
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BarkinTree
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November 21, 2013, 09:55:13 PM |
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Fine, you're arrogant because you can't stop talking about how much better you are than US citizens . You don't know shit about what has happened to our populace and our land. Corporations and wealthy individuals own everything. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wealth_inequality_in_the_United_StatesBTW, I don't buy the whole capitalist-socialist dichotomy. Everything is shades of gray, and it is the extremes you have to watch out for. You seem to want to restrict the term arrogance to what is probably better termed "US exceptionalism". Yes, this is a form of arrogance, but arrogance can take many forms. i don't have much of an opinion of u.s. citizens really. but the consensus about them is well established. i also don't buy the capitalist-socialist dichotomy... as it's commonly illustrated. i think the perceived arrogance of people from the US is much due to US exceptionalism, yes -- i was making that point because that is what non-US folks are exposed to. but i am talking about the dictionary definition of "arrogance". sure, there is great wealth inequality in the u.s. that doesn't mean there isn't far greater wealth inequality elsewhere, such as in South America. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/Gini_Coefficient_World_CIA_Report_2009.svgit also doesn't speak to the effect of historic exploitation of the southern hemisphere by the north. over 53% of world net worth (based on PPP) is concentrated in North America and Europe, which has less then 15% of world population. when we talk about wealth inequality, surely comparing that of the u.s. with that of that of bolivia is sort of ridiculous, right? are we talking about being entitled to basic human necessities, perhaps education? or are we talking about being entitled to a basic minimum income? or big screen tvs? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_of_wealthin the u.s., when people complain about entitlements, i hear complaints about people buying big screen tvs with welfare checks. (i take that with grain of salt) surely, you don't think that these are the sort of entitlements that Brazilians seek? that they are arrogant for fighting for? especially given the nature of wealth inequality? am i arrogant for fighting for a better education system for my children? i must feel so self-important? it's one thing if the state does not exists. it's another thing if the state will exists for the forseeable future, and exploits, and allows exploitation. in the latter case, i think it is only reasonable for people to try to reform the state, to legally prescribe what had once been unwritten -- their ownership, their rights, their dignity. even if i do not support reformism. i still do not see this as arrogance. someone who is arrogant by definition does not see themselves as equal to others. As I already tried to explain, we have the same master and we should work on an escape plan. But you would rather argue over who gets whipped the hardest. The fact is, state boundaries only exist for the general populace. Corporations are transnational. The state has become a tool for them to divide and conquer. no, my issue was just with referring to Americans as people from the u.s. i'd rather not argue over that, but felt it was necessary since your assertions about entitlements (and thus, their relation to "arrogance") are relative to the context of the u.s. and thus have very limited application. part of the issue, also, is that our proposed escape plans are likely quite different.
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notme
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1904
Merit: 1002
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November 21, 2013, 09:59:05 PM |
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Fine, you're arrogant because you can't stop talking about how much better you are than US citizens . You don't know shit about what has happened to our populace and our land. Corporations and wealthy individuals own everything. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wealth_inequality_in_the_United_StatesBTW, I don't buy the whole capitalist-socialist dichotomy. Everything is shades of gray, and it is the extremes you have to watch out for. You seem to want to restrict the term arrogance to what is probably better termed "US exceptionalism". Yes, this is a form of arrogance, but arrogance can take many forms. i don't have much of an opinion of u.s. citizens really. but the consensus about them is well established. i also don't buy the capitalist-socialist dichotomy... as it's commonly illustrated. i think the perceived arrogance of people from the US is much due to US exceptionalism, yes -- i was making that point because that is what non-US folks are exposed to. but i am talking about the dictionary definition of "arrogance". sure, there is great wealth inequality in the u.s. that doesn't mean there isn't far greater wealth inequality elsewhere, such as in South America. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/Gini_Coefficient_World_CIA_Report_2009.svgit also doesn't speak to the effect of historic exploitation of the southern hemisphere by the north. over 53% of world net worth (based on PPP) is concentrated in North America and Europe, which has less then 15% of world population. when we talk about wealth inequality, surely comparing that of the u.s. with that of that of bolivia is sort of ridiculous, right? are we talking about being entitled to basic human necessities, perhaps education? or are we talking about being entitled to a basic minimum income? or big screen tvs? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_of_wealthin the u.s., when people complain about entitlements, i hear complaints about people buying big screen tvs with welfare checks. (i take that with grain of salt) surely, you don't think that these are the sort of entitlements that Brazilians seek? that they are arrogant for fighting for? especially given the nature of wealth inequality? am i arrogant for fighting for a better education system for my children? i must feel so self-important? it's one thing if the state does not exists. it's another thing if the state will exists for the forseeable future, and exploits, and allows exploitation. in the latter case, i think it is only reasonable for people to try to reform the state, to legally prescribe what had once been unwritten -- their ownership, their rights, their dignity. even if i do not support reformism. i still do not see this as arrogance. someone who is arrogant by definition does not see themselves as equal to others. As I already tried to explain, we have the same master and we should work on an escape plan. But you would rather argue over who gets whipped the hardest. The fact is, state boundaries only exist for the general populace. Corporations are transnational. The state has become a tool for them to divide and conquer. no, my issue was just with referring to Americans as people from the u.s. i'd rather not argue over that, but felt it was necessary since your assertions about entitlements (and thus, their relation to "arrogance") are relative to the context of the u.s. and thus have very limited application. part of the issue, also, is that our proposed escape plans are likely quite different. I never did that. You assumed I did, and then argued with me about arrogance. So your issue is with your own misunderstanding that I immediately rebuked before this devolved into a pissing contest.
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Equus
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 136
Merit: 100
Why the long face?
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November 21, 2013, 10:00:07 PM |
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Mortgage the house and buy some back. Or get a second loan and buy some back. You will eventually be able to pay of the second loan and still have some coins in case (which there is a decent chance) we get to $100,000 and beyond.
Only on bitcointalk can you find this sort of advice. My goodness. Debt is so deeply rooted in US folks mentality that it hurts. I really have a simpathy for Bitchick, I'm a long-term bull myself, but came on... To advise someone to get in debt (even worse, to mortgage his house) to buy a high-risk experimental currency is so fucked up it blows my mind. We where speaking about "opportunities you cannot afford to lose"... Well, being in debt or losing your house to gamble is something NOBODY should afford to do. And that type of mentality leads me to think that eventually BTC will implode sooner than later, people tends to auto-destruction and greed is one of the main mind-fuckers. Mortgage debt might as well be free right now, and having your entire net worth in a house is even stupider than having your entire net worth in bitcoins. Bitchick is right. If he owns nothing but a house he should take out a small enough mortgage that his salary could cover it if need be. The money should be invested in a diversified portfolio that should include some bitcoins. His net worth doesn't change, and he isn't relying on his local real estate market to maintain it.
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BRADLEYPLOOF
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November 21, 2013, 10:00:25 PM |
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Fine, you're arrogant because you can't stop talking about how much better you are than US citizens . You don't know shit about what has happened to our populace and our land. Corporations and wealthy individuals own everything. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wealth_inequality_in_the_United_StatesBTW, I don't buy the whole capitalist-socialist dichotomy. Everything is shades of gray, and it is the extremes you have to watch out for. You seem to want to restrict the term arrogance to what is probably better termed "US exceptionalism". Yes, this is a form of arrogance, but arrogance can take many forms. i don't have much of an opinion of u.s. citizens really. but the consensus about them is well established. i also don't buy the capitalist-socialist dichotomy... as it's commonly illustrated. i think the perceived arrogance of people from the US is much due to US exceptionalism, yes -- i was making that point because that is what non-US folks are exposed to. but i am talking about the dictionary definition of "arrogance". sure, there is great wealth inequality in the u.s. that doesn't mean there isn't far greater wealth inequality elsewhere, such as in South America. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/Gini_Coefficient_World_CIA_Report_2009.svgit also doesn't speak to the effect of historic exploitation of the southern hemisphere by the north. over 53% of world net worth (based on PPP) is concentrated in North America and Europe, which has less then 15% of world population. when we talk about wealth inequality, surely comparing that of the u.s. with that of that of bolivia is sort of ridiculous, right? are we talking about being entitled to basic human necessities, perhaps education? or are we talking about being entitled to a basic minimum income? or big screen tvs? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_of_wealthin the u.s., when people complain about entitlements, i hear complaints about people buying big screen tvs with welfare checks. (i take that with grain of salt) surely, you don't think that these are the sort of entitlements that Brazilians seek? that they are arrogant for fighting for? especially given the nature of wealth inequality? am i arrogant for fighting for a better education system for my children? i must feel so self-important? it's one thing if the state does not exists. it's another thing if the state will exists for the forseeable future, and exploits, and allows exploitation. in the latter case, i think it is only reasonable for people to try to reform the state, to legally prescribe what had once been unwritten -- their ownership, their rights, their dignity. even if i do not support reformism. i still do not see this as arrogance. someone who is arrogant by definition does not see themselves as equal to others. As I already tried to explain, we have the same master and we should work on an escape plan. But you would rather argue over who gets whipped the hardest. The fact is, state boundaries only exist for the general populace. Corporations are transnational. The state has become a tool for them to divide and conquer. no, my issue was just with referring to Americans as people from the u.s. i'd rather not argue over that, but felt it was necessary since your assertions about entitlements (and thus, their relation to "arrogance") are relative to the context of the u.s. and thus have very limited application. part of the issue, also, is that our proposed escape plans are likely quite different. I never did that. You assumed I did, and then argued with me about arrogance. Okay, whaa whaa whaa...take this to some other thread. We're speculating on bitcoin, not who's panties are in a tighter bunch. Please, for the love of the flying spaghetti monster, find a different place to play.
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rpietila
Donator
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1722
Merit: 1036
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November 21, 2013, 10:00:59 PM |
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Double top? Or possible retracement back up?
This will be answered in 24 hours. I am already giving up the hope for double top, but it does not matter, since my strategy is intact.
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ChartBuddy
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2310
Merit: 1801
1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
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November 21, 2013, 10:01:48 PM |
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notme
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1904
Merit: 1002
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November 21, 2013, 10:02:11 PM |
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Fine, you're arrogant because you can't stop talking about how much better you are than US citizens . You don't know shit about what has happened to our populace and our land. Corporations and wealthy individuals own everything. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wealth_inequality_in_the_United_StatesBTW, I don't buy the whole capitalist-socialist dichotomy. Everything is shades of gray, and it is the extremes you have to watch out for. You seem to want to restrict the term arrogance to what is probably better termed "US exceptionalism". Yes, this is a form of arrogance, but arrogance can take many forms. i don't have much of an opinion of u.s. citizens really. but the consensus about them is well established. i also don't buy the capitalist-socialist dichotomy... as it's commonly illustrated. i think the perceived arrogance of people from the US is much due to US exceptionalism, yes -- i was making that point because that is what non-US folks are exposed to. but i am talking about the dictionary definition of "arrogance". sure, there is great wealth inequality in the u.s. that doesn't mean there isn't far greater wealth inequality elsewhere, such as in South America. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/Gini_Coefficient_World_CIA_Report_2009.svgit also doesn't speak to the effect of historic exploitation of the southern hemisphere by the north. over 53% of world net worth (based on PPP) is concentrated in North America and Europe, which has less then 15% of world population. when we talk about wealth inequality, surely comparing that of the u.s. with that of that of bolivia is sort of ridiculous, right? are we talking about being entitled to basic human necessities, perhaps education? or are we talking about being entitled to a basic minimum income? or big screen tvs? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_of_wealthin the u.s., when people complain about entitlements, i hear complaints about people buying big screen tvs with welfare checks. (i take that with grain of salt) surely, you don't think that these are the sort of entitlements that Brazilians seek? that they are arrogant for fighting for? especially given the nature of wealth inequality? am i arrogant for fighting for a better education system for my children? i must feel so self-important? it's one thing if the state does not exists. it's another thing if the state will exists for the forseeable future, and exploits, and allows exploitation. in the latter case, i think it is only reasonable for people to try to reform the state, to legally prescribe what had once been unwritten -- their ownership, their rights, their dignity. even if i do not support reformism. i still do not see this as arrogance. someone who is arrogant by definition does not see themselves as equal to others. As I already tried to explain, we have the same master and we should work on an escape plan. But you would rather argue over who gets whipped the hardest. The fact is, state boundaries only exist for the general populace. Corporations are transnational. The state has become a tool for them to divide and conquer. no, my issue was just with referring to Americans as people from the u.s. i'd rather not argue over that, but felt it was necessary since your assertions about entitlements (and thus, their relation to "arrogance") are relative to the context of the u.s. and thus have very limited application. part of the issue, also, is that our proposed escape plans are likely quite different. I never did that. You assumed I did, and then argued with me about arrogance. Okay, whaa whaa whaa...take this to some other thread. We're speculating on bitcoin, not who's panties are in a tighter bunch. Please, for the love of the flying spaghetti monster, find a different place to play. Let's quote it more times to complain some.
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rampantparanoia
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November 21, 2013, 10:06:12 PM |
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flying spaghetti monster
Fucking pastafarian. (:
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gandhibt
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November 21, 2013, 10:09:17 PM |
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buying back at loss is the most important thing for long time "low risk" profit, so all you bears, don't feel sad, you still have dollars, you can still have coins
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macsga
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1484
Merit: 1002
Strange, yet attractive.
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November 21, 2013, 10:12:06 PM |
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Going to sleep fellas. Have a nice one!
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rpietila
Donator
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1722
Merit: 1036
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November 21, 2013, 10:13:05 PM |
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Is there anyone who wants to exit Litecoins for a nice profit?
I buy LTC in quantity and pay fiat currency your choice.
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Spaceman_Spiff
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1638
Merit: 1001
₪``Campaign Manager´´₪
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November 21, 2013, 10:14:40 PM |
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Is there anyone who wants to exit Litecoins for a nice profit?
I buy LTC in quantity and pay fiat currency your choice.
Trying to talk up the market? (I might be getting somewhat paranoid about you trying to influence the market, if so, apologies)
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crazy_rabbit
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1204
Merit: 1002
RUM AND CARROTS: A PIRATE LIFE FOR ME
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November 21, 2013, 10:17:11 PM |
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Double top? Or possible retracement back up?
This will be answered in 24 hours. I am already giving up the hope for double top, but it does not matter, since my strategy is intact. Bitstamp seems cautious, not buying into the breaking of 700.
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rpietila
Donator
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1722
Merit: 1036
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November 21, 2013, 10:19:30 PM |
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Is there anyone who wants to exit Litecoins for a nice profit?
I buy LTC in quantity and pay fiat currency your choice.
Trying to talk up the market? (I might be getting somewhat paranoid about you trying to influence the market, if so, apologies) I havent seen any correlation between my ramblings and the market this month. LTC will be mercilessly sold as part of an unbelievably complex arbitrage operation involving exotic countries and high-level government officials.
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BarkinTree
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November 21, 2013, 10:20:45 PM |
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Fine, you're arrogant because you can't stop talking about how much better you are than US citizens . You don't know shit about what has happened to our populace and our land. Corporations and wealthy individuals own everything. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wealth_inequality_in_the_United_StatesBTW, I don't buy the whole capitalist-socialist dichotomy. Everything is shades of gray, and it is the extremes you have to watch out for. You seem to want to restrict the term arrogance to what is probably better termed "US exceptionalism". Yes, this is a form of arrogance, but arrogance can take many forms. i don't have much of an opinion of u.s. citizens really. but the consensus about them is well established. i also don't buy the capitalist-socialist dichotomy... as it's commonly illustrated. i think the perceived arrogance of people from the US is much due to US exceptionalism, yes -- i was making that point because that is what non-US folks are exposed to. but i am talking about the dictionary definition of "arrogance". sure, there is great wealth inequality in the u.s. that doesn't mean there isn't far greater wealth inequality elsewhere, such as in South America. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/Gini_Coefficient_World_CIA_Report_2009.svgit also doesn't speak to the effect of historic exploitation of the southern hemisphere by the north. over 53% of world net worth (based on PPP) is concentrated in North America and Europe, which has less then 15% of world population. when we talk about wealth inequality, surely comparing that of the u.s. with that of that of bolivia is sort of ridiculous, right? are we talking about being entitled to basic human necessities, perhaps education? or are we talking about being entitled to a basic minimum income? or big screen tvs? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_of_wealthin the u.s., when people complain about entitlements, i hear complaints about people buying big screen tvs with welfare checks. (i take that with grain of salt) surely, you don't think that these are the sort of entitlements that Brazilians seek? that they are arrogant for fighting for? especially given the nature of wealth inequality? am i arrogant for fighting for a better education system for my children? i must feel so self-important? it's one thing if the state does not exists. it's another thing if the state will exists for the forseeable future, and exploits, and allows exploitation. in the latter case, i think it is only reasonable for people to try to reform the state, to legally prescribe what had once been unwritten -- their ownership, their rights, their dignity. even if i do not support reformism. i still do not see this as arrogance. someone who is arrogant by definition does not see themselves as equal to others. As I already tried to explain, we have the same master and we should work on an escape plan. But you would rather argue over who gets whipped the hardest. The fact is, state boundaries only exist for the general populace. Corporations are transnational. The state has become a tool for them to divide and conquer. no, my issue was just with referring to Americans as people from the u.s. i'd rather not argue over that, but felt it was necessary since your assertions about entitlements (and thus, their relation to "arrogance") are relative to the context of the u.s. and thus have very limited application. part of the issue, also, is that our proposed escape plans are likely quite different. I never did that. You assumed I did, and then argued with me about arrogance. So your issue is with your own misunderstanding that I immediately rebuked before this devolved into a pissing contest. you went from saying "people from the u.s." to "Americans". i know you tried to turn it into saying all Americans are arrogant and not just people from the u.s., but the explanation was nonsensical on its face. and the "socialist=arrogant" argument, which is clearly nonsensical, was the only thing you could come up with to explain the back-tracking. i'd take your word for it that it was my misunderstanding, except you couldn't explain how your claims applied to all Americans. all you did was concede that people from the u.s. are arrogant. hence, you were talking about people from the u.s.
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bitcoinpsftp
Member
Offline
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
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November 21, 2013, 10:21:29 PM |
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Litecoins are interesting. Do you guys think it will ever catch up anywhere close to where bitcoin is though? I was thinking, is it even worthwhile to mine litecoins with a normal gpu?
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alexeft
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 854
Merit: 1000
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November 21, 2013, 10:26:06 PM |
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Mining Bitcoin by hand (self.Bitcoin) submitted 19 hours ago* by C121 I figured I'd calculate how long it would take to mine bitcoin using a pen and paper for fun. According to some forum posts, it takes 3385 integer operations to calculate one double SHA-256 hash. These are 32-bit operations, so we'll give a very generous estimate of 10 seconds per operation (we're assuming that you're a numeric genius) This works out to a rate of .0000295 hashes per second. Not bad, right? Throwing the current difficulty (609482679.88835) into this calculator gives us an average time of 2,809,786,333,451,380 years to mine one block. Have no fear, this is only 200000 times the age of the universe. Now, at current rates of 25 BTC/block, and $600/BTC, this gives us an hourly profit of $0.000000000000000609/hr (assuming we're contributing to a pool, since competing with ASIC machines is just unfair), or about 1/300 of a quadrillionth the national (US) average. What would it cost you to perform this? One three ounce bottle of Noodler's ink is $12.50, and will write for approximately 33 km. Let's say that you're working in binary, and drawing a 1 and a 0 uses 1cm of ink, and you need to write 2 32 bit numbers per addition operation. That's 2166.4 meters of ink per hash. You can do about 50 operations on each side of a piece of paper. Paper runs for about a cent a page on Amazon, so that's about 34 cents per hash. At the (approximate) 2,728,647,008,755,700,000 hashes you need to mine one block, adding these two costs together gives you a whopping $3,162,791,285,103,330,000.00 per block, or, if you're keeping track, you earn 0.000000000000474% of the money you spent mining that block (excluding the cost of petayears worth of food and shelter, and assuming the difficulty of mining and the value of bitcoin freezes forver at this moment). Anyone want to get started with me? tl;dr - mining by hand is no longer profitable.
http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/1r3wau/mining_bitcoin_by_hand/Hilarious!!! Just hilarious!!! Cheers to whoever wrote this!!!
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wachtwoord
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2338
Merit: 1136
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November 21, 2013, 10:29:27 PM |
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Litecoins are interesting. Do you guys think it will ever catch up anywhere close to where bitcoin is though? I was thinking, is it even worthwhile to mine litecoins with a normal gpu?
For one there will be 84 M LTC in total verus 21 M Bitcoin.
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PrymeTyme
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November 21, 2013, 10:30:02 PM |
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755 gettin closer Rallie hard .....
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