Bitcoin Forum
April 26, 2024, 02:07:30 PM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 27.0 [Torrent]
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register More  
Poll
Question: What happens first:
New ATH - 43 (69.4%)
<$60,000 - 19 (30.6%)
Total Voters: 62

Pages: « 1 ... 22130 22131 22132 22133 22134 22135 22136 22137 22138 22139 22140 22141 22142 22143 22144 22145 22146 22147 22148 22149 22150 22151 22152 22153 22154 22155 22156 22157 22158 22159 22160 22161 22162 22163 22164 22165 22166 22167 22168 22169 22170 22171 22172 22173 22174 22175 22176 22177 22178 22179 [22180] 22181 22182 22183 22184 22185 22186 22187 22188 22189 22190 22191 22192 22193 22194 22195 22196 22197 22198 22199 22200 22201 22202 22203 22204 22205 22206 22207 22208 22209 22210 22211 22212 22213 22214 22215 22216 22217 22218 22219 22220 22221 22222 22223 22224 22225 22226 22227 22228 22229 22230 ... 33302 »
  Print  
Author Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion  (Read 26368175 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.)
kenzawak
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 658
Merit: 851



View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:32:29 PM

https://twitter.com/CryptoCoinsNews/status/1082000344379506688

1714140450
Hero Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 1714140450

View Profile Personal Message (Offline)

Ignore
1714140450
Reply with quote  #2

1714140450
Report to moderator
1714140450
Hero Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 1714140450

View Profile Personal Message (Offline)

Ignore
1714140450
Reply with quote  #2

1714140450
Report to moderator
1714140450
Hero Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 1714140450

View Profile Personal Message (Offline)

Ignore
1714140450
Reply with quote  #2

1714140450
Report to moderator
Advertised sites are not endorsed by the Bitcoin Forum. They may be unsafe, untrustworthy, or illegal in your jurisdiction.
lightfoot
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3094
Merit: 2239


I fix broken miners. And make holes in teeth :-)


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:33:46 PM

Remember stuffing DIMMs in a PCI (pre-PCIe) card for a faster boot?

Yes. Also AT bus cards. Though they were DIPs at the time.

S-100 for the win!
UNIBUS, only way to go. Also had the failed unibus address register (FUBAR) which basically told the programmer they were fucked.
Arriemoller
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2282
Merit: 1767


Cлaвa Укpaїнi!


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:34:32 PM

One more haiku
Roach making noises
Best thread is getting boring
Long sideways market


Roach. Angry noises.
The Jews did Nine-Eleven.
Bitcoin really sucks.

W.O. Thread micg and company almost finishing
Mic getting hammerd
Wodka martini
+-4 red wines
Dessert whiskey or irish coffee still nerds to come
Maybe gonna look for a JEW in antwerp a religious one and give him a F***ing HUG
Still not selling any of me coins
#F***ed up saturday


For sure Eddie gets my last merit this evening
Must be Hero as fast as possible


Worst haiku ever
Micg too drunk to write
No more merits

That haiku is wrong
I was very sleepy then
Will correct it now

Worst haiku ever
Micgoosens too drunk to write
No more merits sent
P_Shep
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1795
Merit: 1198


This is not OK.


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:36:37 PM

Quote
I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later Wink

? ? ?

What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military?

I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history.

I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices.

It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs.

Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.

And just like that, his hard-on for big-blocks becomes entirely clear!
Man's gotta make a livin'...
d_eddie
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2478
Merit: 2895



View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:37:59 PM
Merited by kurious (1), bones261 (1)

Out of merits now
Merit sources where art thou
I need more merits

Mmmm bones didn’t you had a double upgrade of stashes  Tongue  Tongue

Tried to make a haiku of it ....
But still need to try better cause still not getting it
Next one must be spot on before posting

My well of source merits is overflowing at the moment. However, I have to guard against being too generous and carefree. Don't want to see a bunch of sour grapes bitching showing up in Meta and reputation boards about my meriting behavior.  Roll Eyes
Goose is still wining
and dining his fair lady,
whiners keep whining.
HairyMaclairy
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1414
Merit: 2174


Degenerate bull hatter & Bitcoin monotheist


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:38:27 PM
Merited by yefi (1)

Quote
I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later Wink

? ? ?

What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military?

I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history.

I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices.

It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs.

Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.

To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail
d_eddie
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2478
Merit: 2895



View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:39:34 PM

Bob's penis is green,
And Jimbo's going down South.
Bullish or bearish?

Out of merits now
Merit sources where art thou
I need more merits

My favorites in the last bunch Smiley

EDIT: and this! Nearly escaped me.

Allow me a potentially controversial statement:

The cryptoqueen
Bringing balance to the group
We need more females
bitserve
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1820
Merit: 1464


Self made HODLER ✓


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:39:57 PM

Quote
I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later Wink

? ? ?

What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military?

I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history.

I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices.

It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs.

Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.

To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail

I am retarded... what does that mean in this case?
HairyMaclairy
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1414
Merit: 2174


Degenerate bull hatter & Bitcoin monotheist


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:42:32 PM
Merited by vapourminer (1), Paashaas (1), infofront (1)

Quote
I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later Wink

? ? ?

What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military?

I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history.

I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices.

It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs.

Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.

To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail

I am retarded... what does that mean in this case?

Of course he believes in big blocks.  He is a mass storage engineer. To him, the solution to all (most) problems is more storage.

Edits:

Ask a lawyer how to fix Bitcoin and they will say you need to build in AML.  Ask a banker how to fix Bitcoin and they will tell you you need a central permissioning authority.  Ask an accountant and they will tell you you need an API to the IRS.  Ask a mass storage engineer and get a mass storage solution.....


Big blocks are just another form of mass storage.  
JimboToronto
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3990
Merit: 4457


You're never too old to think young.


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:43:34 PM

Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.

Sorry. I had no intent at doxxing him.

I 'd already figured out he was one of the more technologically knowledgeable and experienced people here.

I was just curious about his implied involvement in SSD development.

SSDs were my biggest source of tech fascination a dozen years ago. Then I discovered Bitcoin.
P_Shep
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1795
Merit: 1198


This is not OK.


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:47:02 PM

Quote
I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later Wink

? ? ?

What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military?

I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history.

I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices.

It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs.

Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.

To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail

I am retarded... what does that mean in this case?

Of course he believes in big blocks.  He is a mass storage engineer. To him, more storage is easy and the answer to all (most) problems. 

So we can safely ignore anything he has to say about big block forks as his opinion is massively biased by his profession. Which is fair enough.
bitserve
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1820
Merit: 1464


Self made HODLER ✓


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:47:48 PM

Quote
I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later Wink

? ? ?

What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military?

I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history.

I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices.

It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs.

Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.

To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail

I am retarded... what does that mean in this case?

Of course he believes in big blocks.  He is a mass storage engineer. To him, the solution to all (most) problems is more storage. Big blocks are just a form of more storage.

Ask a lawyer how to fix Bitcoin and they will say you need to build in AML.  Ask a banker how to fix Bitcoin and they will tell you you need a central permissioning authority.

Ah yeah, I have already made some subtle joke to him about Bcash and mass storage in the past....

d_eddie
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2478
Merit: 2895



View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:49:19 PM

Passive Mod Mode: Off
Trolls will not be allowed to completely derail the thread.

I guess there are better things to do in the holiday season, or in winter weekends, or in weekends or weekdays or whenever, but thank you for a usually thankless job, felt more than noticed by most (including me).
jojo69
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3150
Merit: 4309


diamond-handed zealot


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:49:20 PM

Quote
I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later Wink

? ? ?

What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military?

I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history.

I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices.

It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs.

Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.

And just like that, his hard-on for big-blocks becomes entirely clear!
Man's gotta make a livin'...

LOLOL!

a clear conflict of interest  Tongue
xhomerx10
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3822
Merit: 7968



View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:49:30 PM
Merited by yefi (1)

Quote
I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later Wink

? ? ?

What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military?

I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history.

I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices.

It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs.

Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.

To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail

I am retarded... what does that mean in this case?

I am retarded
What does that mean in this case?
Five more syllables.

Toxic2040
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1792
Merit: 4141



View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:51:53 PM
Merited by Dakustaking76 (5)

I guess if this is a bull trap...I will happily be first to admit you got me. Looking at longer term indicators seems to show a bounce to $4.8k-$5.3k might be possible.

W



W
bitserve
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1820
Merit: 1464


Self made HODLER ✓


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:52:53 PM

Quote
I was an SSD fan ...
You can thank me later Wink

? ? ?

What was your involvement? NVRAM or controller development? Civil or military?

I realize SSDs date back to the late 1980s. I'm fascinated by the early history.

I always saw storage as the main performance bottleneck in any computer system. I figured when cheap low-power-consumption high-capacity dependable solid state storage was achieved, we'd see a whole new world of portable devices.

It's not surprising that the first netbooks and then smartphones and tablets followed closely behind the development of MLC and TLC flash and controllers with improved wear leveling and garbage collection algorithms. Sure, improved battery and radio technologies helped but the mobile revolution was spurred by SSDs.

Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.

To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail

I am retarded... what does that mean in this case?

I am retarded
What does that mean in this case?
Five more syllables.




Wut??
vapourminer
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 4312
Merit: 3508


what is this "brake pedal" you speak of?


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:56:02 PM
Merited by BobLawblaw (1)

aaaah

and does has to be

4
5
4

THX man

first five syllables
not one more and not one less
second line seven

the third line is five
so to be a true haiku
these rules must obey

EDIT: man i suck at this lol
JimboToronto
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3990
Merit: 4457


You're never too old to think young.


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:58:20 PM

Inb4 jbreher fully dox himself: He is a fucking good mass storage engineer/developer. Would love he tells us more details if he feels like. He may have a wrong view of what is the true Bitcoin but the guy really knows his shit and has more high stakes pro level technical background that most of us here. Respect.
Sorry. I had no intent at doxxing him.

Actually he already doxxed himself by using his real name. I'd never checked him out before.

Wow. That's a pretty good set of credentials and accomplishments there. I'm impressed.

You can thank me later Wink

Thank you, thank you, thank you.

We've come a long way from punch cards.
infofront (OP)
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2632
Merit: 2780


Shitcoin Minimalist


View Profile
January 06, 2019, 08:58:38 PM

Connecting the dots
Hairy explains the bear's mind
Bear chose the wrong side
Pages: « 1 ... 22130 22131 22132 22133 22134 22135 22136 22137 22138 22139 22140 22141 22142 22143 22144 22145 22146 22147 22148 22149 22150 22151 22152 22153 22154 22155 22156 22157 22158 22159 22160 22161 22162 22163 22164 22165 22166 22167 22168 22169 22170 22171 22172 22173 22174 22175 22176 22177 22178 22179 [22180] 22181 22182 22183 22184 22185 22186 22187 22188 22189 22190 22191 22192 22193 22194 22195 22196 22197 22198 22199 22200 22201 22202 22203 22204 22205 22206 22207 22208 22209 22210 22211 22212 22213 22214 22215 22216 22217 22218 22219 22220 22221 22222 22223 22224 22225 22226 22227 22228 22229 22230 ... 33302 »
  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!