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Question: How far will this leg take us?
$110K - 9 (8.3%)
$120K - 19 (17.6%)
$130K - 17 (15.7%)
$140K - 9 (8.3%)
$150K - 19 (17.6%)
$160K - 2 (1.9%)
$170K+ - 33 (30.6%)
Total Voters: 108

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Author Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion  (Read 26837423 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 1 users with 9 merit deleted.)
aminorex
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February 18, 2014, 03:26:23 AM
 #91021

Most importantly, Where are we currently at on that chart?   the beginning, middle or end?

In capitulation, heading to despair. All of which will become just another part of the next take-off phase.
Quote
Maybe we are still in the early stages of the awareness stage?  Lots of people do NOT know what the fuck is bitcoin.

The first great use-case for bitcoin, which will drive value for the next couple of years, is international remittances.
The mass of adopters for remittances consists of immigrants.  I am in New York City about half of the time, and always
ask every taxi driver if they have ever heard of bitcoin.  These people are from Bangladesh, Pakistan, Ghana, Senegal, etc.
Never, not once, has a taxi driver known what a bitcoin was, or even how to spell it with confidence.  (Although,
I suspect a few of them may one day send their children to Harvard with bitcoin bought since I met them.)

We are way, way short of take-off.  We are in stealth mode.

marcus_of_augustus
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February 18, 2014, 03:26:41 AM
 #91022

Or, he thinks long-term.
The more long-term you predict bitcoin, the more you gamble. There are so many real factors that rise probability, that in the coming years, bitcoin will die. Only thing special about bitcoin is that it was the first popular outlet of an very good idea. It's like believing in the 80s that Apple will always dominate the personal computer market, because it was the first to succeed with Macintosh. You can't hold onto this idea alone. Other can better that idea or just market that idea better with their products.

Quote
Bitcoin value is only held up by speculation
- Definitely not true.  Bitcoin adds a great deal of economic value.
Sadly it is. Bitcoin has very little economic value, the idea has a lot of potential for value, but bitcoin itself is an economic gimmick. Mainly because of the overly simplified proof-of-work system to introduce new coins. Because of that, bitcoin will never be a stand-alone currency and it needs fiat to give it value.
Right now, with adopting bitcoin payments at your shop has no value in financial efficiency. You will only gain the trouble in converting your money. Only reason why some companies decide to accept bitcoin payment, is for marketing reasons. Starting to accept bitcoin will get you lot's of free press and it will also get you some new loyar customers among those who are loyal to bitcoin. It will make your financial dealings less efficent, not more.

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If you want to store value, then buy resources like rare-earth metals, that are in constant demand together with technological advancements and their supply is constantly getting tighter.

-"Rare-earth" is a bit of a misnomer.  They aren't actually all that rare.  And the supply-demand equation fluctuates a great deal.  I would definitely consider bitcoin to be a much safer investment than rare-earth commodities, which are not so easy to physically hold, by the way. There may be some rare-earth supply-chain enterprises which are fairly safe investments, but they are unlikely to qualify as stores of value, or to provide such speculative upside as bitcoin.
With Rare-earth metals, it's not hard to find geographical places from where to extract the ore, but it will be difficult to find places that let mining and processing with this environmental impact to happen on their soil. And also to consider the growing demand, I think that picking the right element is the best store of value investment that one can currently do.

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Bitcoin is not rare, it's only decided by a group of people that it is rare. And you are also trusting a group of unknown people that it will stay rare.
- A very large group of mostly known people whose interests are fairly predictably aligned with my own.
There are about 12,37mil bitcoins in circulation. Can you tell me the names of the known people who own 6mil bitcoins together? or even 2mil? or 1mil?
Last time I remember that some big bitcoin holder came into public with his coins was when Winklevosses declared that they have about 1% of total bitcoin circulation. Can you please give me other names that have declared how big their stake is in bitcoin, so I can see on who are these people who I am supposed to trust then?

Cool, another obnoxious, arrogant  know-it-all has found the Wall observer thread ... fresh meat on the grill.
windjc
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February 18, 2014, 03:27:30 AM
 #91023

You don't actually understand macroeconomics and finance better than me or you would know that the value in bitcoin is not as a currency.
Oh, interesting! Explain me then, what is the true value of bitcoin.

You missed the entire point of this technology.
The technology of what? Cryptography? Python? Personal computers? The Internet?
Bitcoin source code doesn't bring anything new to the table, it only combines existing technologies in one innovative idea. So, there is no complex "technology" in bitcoin to be valued, the idea is what is valuable and the idea can be made better by others with their own innovations.

Volatility doesn't matter to merchants for reasons that are obvious and because of issues that have already been resolved by companies like Bitpay.
Services like Bitpay will only maximize it's utility with using it as an intermediate payment tool to compete with credit card companies. Currently using bitcoin is more expensive, time consuming and difficult then using a credit cards. Right now it's a gimmick even in this intermediate payment field. It only could be more then a gimmick if it would be a stand-alone currency without fiat to support it.

In 5 years you will understand.


KeyserSoze
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February 18, 2014, 03:28:03 AM
 #91024

I spy panic on the horizon.


http://disney.wikia.com/wiki/Pain_and_Panic
kkaspar
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February 18, 2014, 03:29:44 AM
 #91025

I might mention here that your manners and language are not characteristic of an educated mind, nor even of a marginally socialized modest intelligence.

Yes, I know. But I have no reason to remain civil with someone who repeatedly tells me that I have no vision or how I don't believe in fundamentals of technology. I find windjc to be arrogant and ignorant at the same time and personally I would have already prefer corporal punishment on him, but I have to settle with what I can.
I will speak to everyone in the language they understand best. I'll only remain civil to people who deserve it. Most of the people who oppose my ideas here deserve it, while windjc is currently the only one here that I think deserves a good ass-kicking instead.

Quote
And where will you find better stability?  "Stablecoin"?  

Bitcoin will be stable when it stops growing so rapidly and has more inertia (market cap, if you must) relative to the fiat cross-flow.

Not all investors are so pusillanimous as to find the necessary growth phase daunting.  Without growth, no network can become non-trivially homeostatic.


Don't know where I will find it, because it hasn't been created yet.
Increase in market cap. will only attract players with deeper pockets and better knowledge on how to play an unregulated market. If market cap. will get bigger then the previous whales won't be as important, but there will be new whales who will be more capable in manipulating the market for their personal gain.
That is the sad final outcome of an deflative currency with an unregulated market system. Money can never be attractive as an investment opportunity or it will ruin the entire idea why money should be. Money is no value by itself, but only an intermediate tool to trade value. If you try to make money as an valuable investment, then you will actually screw up the economy.
marcus_of_augustus
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February 18, 2014, 03:30:13 AM
 #91026

Yep. bitcoin was only good for buying drugs before I got into it ... after that it was only a gimmick.
kkaspar
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February 18, 2014, 03:32:08 AM
 #91027

Yep. bitcoin was only good for buying drugs before I got into it ... after that it was only a gimmick.

It's a gimmick in finance, but it's pretty practical in gambling.
JayJuanGee
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February 18, 2014, 03:32:46 AM
 #91028

@windjc

i read through all the technical fundamentals as you proposed and i came to the conclusion that this chart might be the future of Bitcoin.
It´s actually from the hidden page of Satoshis white paper written with magic ink, many have not seen it before.
You should take a look at it:




pic



LOLOLOLOLLOLOLOLOLLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOOL






Most importantly, Where are we currently at on that chart?   the beginning, middle or end?  Maybe we are still in the early stages of the awareness stage?  Lots of people do NOT know what the fuck is bitcoin.



Goldman sachs(coinbase) and second market are the instituional investors. 40% of all americans know bitcoin. PLus there are huge similarities with the actual chart, check 3d. so do the math, and put your buy orders below 200$  Cool  Cheesy Cheesy

Can we invite the designer of the bubble graph into the forum? That would be awesome, so that everybody could ask him about his opinion.


No chart can predict exactly where BTC is going.. and really I doubt that we are going to reach $200 in the near future (though anything is possible, of course - and there could be some flash crashes... since the BTC market cap is still fairly small at less than 9 billion...  

I do think $400s and $500s are possible in the next weeks... but you know we do NOT really know where we are at on the chart that you presented until we look back at in retrospect..










windjc
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February 18, 2014, 03:35:16 AM
 #91029

Yep. bitcoin was only good for buying drugs before I got into it ... after that it was only a gimmick.

Lol.

The stages of learning:
1. Unconscious incompetence - you don't realize how ignorant you are
2. Conscious incompetence - you realize you 're ignorant
3. Conscious competence - you start to try and understand
4. Unconscious competence - you are able to teach

Kkasper is currently unconsciously incompetent
KeyserSoze
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February 18, 2014, 03:35:21 AM
 #91030

Anyone fancy a go at a MtGox/Karpeles haiku?

imprisoned by gox
the coins of binary birth
hold your breath "two weeks"
marcus_of_augustus
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February 18, 2014, 03:35:55 AM
 #91031

Yep. bitcoin was only good for buying drugs before I got into it ... after that it was only a gimmick.

It's a gimmick in finance, but it's pretty practical in gambling.

You haven't mentioned that it is now an established network protocol yet.

I thought your erudite analysis of why it was going to become obsolete in 2-3 years would need to address that?

PS: Leave the potty-mouth insolence at the door.
kkaspar
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February 18, 2014, 03:36:41 AM
 #91032

Yep. bitcoin was only good for buying drugs before I got into it ... after that it was only a gimmick.

Lol.

The stages of learning:
1. Unconscious incompetence - you don't realize how ignorant you are
2. Conscious incompetence - you realize you 're ignorant
3. Conscious competence - you start to try and understand
4. Unconscious competence - you are able to teach

Kkasper is currently unconsciously incompetent


You're not even competent enough to spell my name..
nanobrain
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February 18, 2014, 03:40:22 AM
 #91033

Anyone fancy a go at a MtGox/Karpeles haiku?

imprisoned by gox
the coins of binary birth
hold your breath "two weeks"

Very good.

And for what its worth, Walsoraj STILL owes me a poem from a bet he lost with me.

Perhaps he should be Welch-o-lot.
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February 18, 2014, 03:41:25 AM
 #91034

Most importantly, Where are we currently at on that chart?   the beginning, middle or end?

In capitulation, heading to despair. All of which will become just another part of the next take-off phase.
Quote
Maybe we are still in the early stages of the awareness stage?  Lots of people do NOT know what the fuck is bitcoin.

The first great use-case for bitcoin, which will drive value for the next couple of years, is international remittances.
The mass of adopters for remittances consists of immigrants.  I am in New York City about half of the time, and always
ask every taxi driver if they have ever heard of bitcoin.  These people are from Bangladesh, Pakistan, Ghana, Senegal, etc.
Never, not once, has a taxi driver known what a bitcoin was, or even how to spell it with confidence.  (Although,
I suspect a few of them may one day send their children to Harvard with bitcoin bought since I met them.)

We are way, way short of take-off.  We are in stealth mode.





I think that we largely agree.. that there is like going to be a take off in the future and it may be in stages.. and it may be partly based on remittances and also other reasons... including the instability of a lot of currencies outside of the dollar.. NOT that the dollar is stable... but relatively speaking it is (at the moment).



kkaspar
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February 18, 2014, 03:41:35 AM
 #91035

Yep. bitcoin was only good for buying drugs before I got into it ... after that it was only a gimmick.

It's a gimmick in finance, but it's pretty practical in gambling.

You haven't mentioned that it is now an established network protocol yet.

I thought your erudite analysis of why it was going to become obsolete in 2-3 years would need to address that?

PS: Leave the potty-mouth insolence at the door.

Even if the bitcoin code could be considered as an established network protocol, it wouldn't mean that bitcoin units will have any value in the future. It would only mean that the same protocol will be used in the future to create new currencies with new units.
But I hardly believe that future developers will use the bitcoin code. Using bitcoin code to create altcoins will stay in time when only hobbyists and students created new coins for fun. If cryptos will be an serious financial tool, then the bitcoin code will be history.
aminorex
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February 18, 2014, 03:46:03 AM
 #91036

gaijin otaku
sips candy frappucino
bitcoinica paid
marcus_of_augustus
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February 18, 2014, 03:46:20 AM
 #91037

Yep. bitcoin was only good for buying drugs before I got into it ... after that it was only a gimmick.

It's a gimmick in finance, but it's pretty practical in gambling.

You haven't mentioned that it is now an established network protocol yet.

I thought your erudite analysis of why it was going to become obsolete in 2-3 years would need to address that?

PS: Leave the potty-mouth insolence at the door.

Even if the bitcoin code could be considered as an established network protocol, it wouldn't mean that bitcoin units will have any value in the future. It would only mean that the same protocol will be used in the future to create new currencies with new units.
But I hardly believe that future developers will use the bitcoin code. Using bitcoin code to create altcoins will stay in time when only hobbyists and students created new coins for fun. If cryptos will be an serious financial tool, then the bitcoin code will be history.

... i guess this is the speculation thread. Unsubstantiated, opinionated diatribe can pass for commentary i suppose.

Edit: you could post your concerns in the "Development and Technical Discussion" if think you have something useful to contribute?
Walsoraj
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February 18, 2014, 03:48:55 AM
 #91038

That 1200 bid wall on gox gonna get pulled and cause some tears.
kkaspar
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February 18, 2014, 03:48:58 AM
 #91039

Yep. bitcoin was only good for buying drugs before I got into it ... after that it was only a gimmick.

It's a gimmick in finance, but it's pretty practical in gambling.

You haven't mentioned that it is now an established network protocol yet.

I thought your erudite analysis of why it was going to become obsolete in 2-3 years would need to address that?

PS: Leave the potty-mouth insolence at the door.

Even if the bitcoin code could be considered as an established network protocol, it wouldn't mean that bitcoin units will have any value in the future. It would only mean that the same protocol will be used in the future to create new currencies with new units.
But I hardly believe that future developers will use the bitcoin code. Using bitcoin code to create altcoins will stay in time when only hobbyists and students created new coins for fun. If cryptos will be an serious financial tool, then the bitcoin code will be history.

... i guess this is the speculation thread. Unsubstantiated, opinionated diatribe can pass for commentary i suppose.

Looking at your posts that were directed at me.. I only have to say that I suppose so.

Edit: Sadly I think that the main faults are in the core of bitcoin and can't be fixed. Faults like deflation and how it promotes increasing use of hardware, while not actually offering practical use for it. If the bitcoin network would be faster or more secure with increased amount of miners, then I would already be more optimistic about bitcoin survival.
derpinheimer
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February 18, 2014, 03:49:57 AM
 #91040

That 1200 bid wall on gox gonna get pulled and cause some tears.

It moved up from like 1600 @ 295 earlier.

Hmmmm? 
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