DigiByte (OP)
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1722
Merit: 1051
Official DigiByte Account
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February 07, 2014, 11:58:03 PM |
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I think some kind of app would raise the value significantly. When goldcoin made one their prices jumped 10 fold. Back in the day.
Do you know what the app did exactly? We are open to any ideas or suggestions.
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Mitsuo
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 1
Merit: 0
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February 08, 2014, 01:30:59 AM |
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Wanted to give everyone a DigiByte development update:
* A few finishing touches are being put on the DigiMan * A professional voice over has been completed for the DigiByte promo video and it sounds great! * A lite wallet as well as a DGB address generator is being worked on. * More newbie guides with pictures are being put together. * The foundation for the design and code of the DGB exchange is being layed out and work has been started on it. * We have started gathering and putting together the application for FINCEN to abide by all appropriate banking laws. * We are aggressively messaging all exchanges and working to get it on some bigger places to trade!
Any ETAs?
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DigiByte (OP)
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1722
Merit: 1051
Official DigiByte Account
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February 08, 2014, 01:33:47 AM |
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New DigiByte mining pool added to pool list! http://dgb.dedicatedpool.com/
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MMos
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February 08, 2014, 03:20:34 AM |
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Will we ever get kimoto gravity well? Seems like certain multipool are using altcoinstats.com and huge hash gets dropped onto us loyal miners but we stay and they leave, leaving us with 3-5 levels of diff adjustments...while needing to mine a couple of hundred blocks... gravity well will solve this problem!
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aimnano
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 42
Merit: 0
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February 08, 2014, 03:24:56 AM |
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https://pool.chunky.ms/doge/site_assets/chunky/img/chunky_small_2.pngHey DigiByte thread, looking for a place to mine DGB? Join us at Chunky Pool!Here's a little more info: - Brand new dashboard/homepage!
- 0% fees forever, not just "for now"
- SSL encryption
- Custom MPOS layout
- Support and a wonderful community @ irc.freenode.net #chunky
- We are equipped to withstand thousands of workers
- Excellent stability and uptime
We also provide many other coin pools and even have a coin-switching multi-port that switches between coins to maximize profitability! One account fits allWe have modified MPOS to provide a multipool experience. You only have to create one account, and that account is shared among all of our coin instances. Unlike some other multipools, and since we're on top of MPOS, we offer you complete transparency about provided shares, found blocks and much more! Pools- Dogecoin - port 3333
- Earthcoin - port 3334
- RonPaulCoin - port 3335
- Lottocoin - port 3336
- Stablecoin - port 3337
- 42coin - port 3338
- Digibyte - port 3339
- Litecoin - port 3340
- Klondikecoin - port 3341
- Leafcoin - port 3342
- Potcoin - port 4200
- Multiport - port 6666
And perhaps the biggest reason of all: we are miners just like you. We started this pool because we were sick of trying to find pools that didn't go down all the time. We are committed to making a better mining environment for you and for ourselves. https://pool.chunky.ms/
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ozzymax
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February 08, 2014, 03:27:41 AM |
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What a dilemma, I sent 10,000 Digibyte coins to an exchange, I generated a deposit address and sent the the coins only to realise that I sent them to a different coin wallet, in my haste I made the mistake of mistaking Digital coin For Digibyte coin as the shortened letters for both coins are very similar and could be mistaken for each other, I was lead to believe that you can't actually send coins to a different coin wallet the client doesn't let you, in this case it did. Obviously these coins never arrived at the exchange and now they are floating around lost in space and time, maybe in a hundred thousand years someone will download a Digibyte client and it will randomly generate the address and the recipient will be a billionaire in a split second. oh well some you win and some you lose.
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xploited
Sr. Member
Offline
Activity: 304
Merit: 252
CLAM Dev
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February 08, 2014, 03:59:28 AM |
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What a dilemma, I sent 10,000 Digibyte coins to an exchange, I generated a deposit address and sent the the coins only to realise that I sent them to a different coin wallet, in my haste I made the mistake of mistaking Digital coin For Digibyte coin as the shortened letters for both coins are very similar and could be mistaken for each other, I was lead to believe that you can't actually send coins to a different coin wallet the client doesn't let you, in this case it did. Obviously these coins never arrived at the exchange and now they are floating around lost in space and time, maybe in a hundred thousand years someone will download a Digibyte client and it will randomly generate the address and the recipient will be a billionaire in a split second. oh well some you win and some you lose. You can contact the exchange. They might be be able to help you out. There were 2 other who had the same issue with coins they send to coinmarket. They wouldn't release private keys to the addresses(understandable) but they can import the private key into their digibyte client and redeem them for you. I can't say if they will or won't as thats really up to the exchange, but it is possible to retrieve them.
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HashEngineering
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February 08, 2014, 05:36:26 AM |
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How do you create addresses without a wallet. It there an online tool like for bitcoin that works for digibyte? Or does digibyte use the same hash methods as bitcoin or litecoin?
DigiByte uses the Scrypt algorithm instead of SHA-256. I believe Scrypt is used for Proof of Work but I'm pretty sure the addresses are still created using sha-256. They do also start with a 'd'. Something like https://github.com/litecoin-project/liteaddress.org shouldnt be that hard to modify. Something in javascript is likely the ideal solution because a hosted service would let the hoster see the private key. In javascript its all done locally. Very interesting. The DigiByte addresses start with a "D" represented by a Base58 check encoding. https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Base58Check_encodingYes, sorry, your absolutely correct. I was was not case sensitive there, which matters. In the source its defined at https://github.com/digibyte/DigiByteProject/blob/master/src/base58.h#L281 To know what you need to change to liteaddress.org to adapt it to your coin, simply use a diff tool to compare bitaddress.org to liteaddress.org code. The differences besides the strings for to "Bitcoin" or "Litecoin" will be the parts that need to be changed. Those parts relate the public and private addresses.
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Archi348
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 11
Merit: 0
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February 08, 2014, 05:45:25 AM |
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Despite the temporary delay in payouts DGB.Luckyminers.com has been steady throughout the last week or so and all is resolved with some patience. Solid hashing with no stratum disconnects. Their current promo for a 500 DGB bonus per block find has been a nice bump in my earnings for the last couple days.
Taking some recent posts to heart and selling some mining proceeds at current levels despite my belief that this coin is still significantly undervalued. Let's get more DGB in circulation for the good of the cause!
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kimb0
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February 08, 2014, 06:05:22 AM |
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PIG: 7Hj3rfTDbzEPVh98n3N3t7UJRBhQq8GDX4
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ipxtreme
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February 08, 2014, 06:08:57 AM |
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This coin is awesome!
DGB tips DSjJBnm9ojoSMdTZdif2rDdRnZkSQnpBJ7
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BTC tips: 14PkHaJH5GexLG9P7MYxHRNvZeCq2t8DWX
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xploited
Sr. Member
Offline
Activity: 304
Merit: 252
CLAM Dev
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February 08, 2014, 06:21:44 AM |
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How do you create addresses without a wallet. It there an online tool like for bitcoin that works for digibyte? Or does digibyte use the same hash methods as bitcoin or litecoin?
DigiByte uses the Scrypt algorithm instead of SHA-256. I believe Scrypt is used for Proof of Work but I'm pretty sure the addresses are still created using sha-256. They do also start with a 'd'. Something like https://github.com/litecoin-project/liteaddress.org shouldnt be that hard to modify. Something in javascript is likely the ideal solution because a hosted service would let the hoster see the private key. In javascript its all done locally. Very interesting. The DigiByte addresses start with a "D" represented by a Base58 check encoding. https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Base58Check_encodingYes, sorry, your absolutely correct. I was was not case sensitive there, which matters. In the source its defined at https://github.com/digibyte/DigiByteProject/blob/master/src/base58.h#L281 To know what you need to change to liteaddress.org to adapt it to your coin, simply use a diff tool to compare bitaddress.org to liteaddress.org code. The differences besides the strings for to "Bitcoin" or "Litecoin" will be the parts that need to be changed. Those parts relate the public and private addresses. I have it up and running at http://digiaddress.org but the paper wallet image hasn't been updated yet which is why I haven't been spreading the news, not that I'm keeping it secret its just isn't fully ready yet and I'm no graphics artist
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mintzone
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February 08, 2014, 06:41:37 AM |
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How do you create addresses without a wallet. It there an online tool like for bitcoin that works for digibyte? Or does digibyte use the same hash methods as bitcoin or litecoin?
DigiByte uses the Scrypt algorithm instead of SHA-256. I believe Scrypt is used for Proof of Work but I'm pretty sure the addresses are still created using sha-256. They do also start with a 'd'. Something like https://github.com/litecoin-project/liteaddress.org shouldnt be that hard to modify. Something in javascript is likely the ideal solution because a hosted service would let the hoster see the private key. In javascript its all done locally. Very interesting. The DigiByte addresses start with a "D" represented by a Base58 check encoding. https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Base58Check_encodingYes, sorry, your absolutely correct. I was was not case sensitive there, which matters. In the source its defined at https://github.com/digibyte/DigiByteProject/blob/master/src/base58.h#L281 To know what you need to change to liteaddress.org to adapt it to your coin, simply use a diff tool to compare bitaddress.org to liteaddress.org code. The differences besides the strings for to "Bitcoin" or "Litecoin" will be the parts that need to be changed. Those parts relate the public and private addresses. I have it up and running at http://digiaddress.org but the paper wallet image hasn't been updated yet which is why I haven't been spreading the news, not that I'm keeping it secret its just isn't fully ready yet and I'm no graphics artist Once again xploited, you deliver something good. Looking forward to when it's all done
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DGB is my and the future's coin of choice! Don't cry if you don't invest
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iikun
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1062
Merit: 1003
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February 08, 2014, 06:57:18 AM |
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What a dilemma, I sent 10,000 Digibyte coins to an exchange, I generated a deposit address and sent the the coins only to realise that I sent them to a different coin wallet, in my haste I made the mistake of mistaking Digital coin For Digibyte coin as the shortened letters for both coins are very similar and could be mistaken for each other, I was lead to believe that you can't actually send coins to a different coin wallet the client doesn't let you, in this case it did. Obviously these coins never arrived at the exchange and now they are floating around lost in space and time, maybe in a hundred thousand years someone will download a Digibyte client and it will randomly generate the address and the recipient will be a billionaire in a split second. oh well some you win and some you lose. You can contact the exchange. They might be be able to help you out. There were 2 other who had the same issue with coins they send to coinmarket. They wouldn't release private keys to the addresses(understandable) but they can import the private key into their digibyte client and redeem them for you. I can't say if they will or won't as thats really up to the exchange, but it is possible to retrieve them. @Digibyte It seems that a few people now have done this. There was a discussion a while ago about changing "DGB" to "DIGI". I personally was in favour of DIGI at the time & still am. Is this discussion now dead or could we arrange a vote on it before Digibyte becomes even more widely adopted? It would be a shame if someone ever loses a large holding because of this avoidable issue.
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xploited
Sr. Member
Offline
Activity: 304
Merit: 252
CLAM Dev
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February 08, 2014, 07:05:24 AM |
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What a dilemma, I sent 10,000 Digibyte coins to an exchange, I generated a deposit address and sent the the coins only to realise that I sent them to a different coin wallet, in my haste I made the mistake of mistaking Digital coin For Digibyte coin as the shortened letters for both coins are very similar and could be mistaken for each other, I was lead to believe that you can't actually send coins to a different coin wallet the client doesn't let you, in this case it did. Obviously these coins never arrived at the exchange and now they are floating around lost in space and time, maybe in a hundred thousand years someone will download a Digibyte client and it will randomly generate the address and the recipient will be a billionaire in a split second. oh well some you win and some you lose. You can contact the exchange. They might be be able to help you out. There were 2 other who had the same issue with coins they send to coinmarket. They wouldn't release private keys to the addresses(understandable) but they can import the private key into their digibyte client and redeem them for you. I can't say if they will or won't as thats really up to the exchange, but it is possible to retrieve them. @Digibyte It seems that a few people now have done this. There was a discussion a while ago about changing "DGB" to "DIGI". I personally was in favour of DIGI at the time & still am. Is this discussion now dead or could we arrange a vote on it before Digibyte becomes even more widely adopted? It would be a shame if someone ever loses a large holding because of this avoidable issue. I've been considering this and I haven't come up with a way to do this without invalidating every current DGB address, which is not a good plan. You can change the name to DIGI from DGB but the root of the problem will still exist. Any coin based off the bitcoin source and having address's starting with 'D' will have addresses that are valid on each others network. I don't believe theres any way around it at this point. If someone has a solution I'm all ear!
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creativecuriosity
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
DGB.Get-By.com Admin
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February 08, 2014, 07:08:23 AM |
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What a dilemma, I sent 10,000 Digibyte coins to an exchange, I generated a deposit address and sent the the coins only to realise that I sent them to a different coin wallet, in my haste I made the mistake of mistaking Digital coin For Digibyte coin as the shortened letters for both coins are very similar and could be mistaken for each other, I was lead to believe that you can't actually send coins to a different coin wallet the client doesn't let you, in this case it did. Obviously these coins never arrived at the exchange and now they are floating around lost in space and time, maybe in a hundred thousand years someone will download a Digibyte client and it will randomly generate the address and the recipient will be a billionaire in a split second. oh well some you win and some you lose. You can contact the exchange. They might be be able to help you out. There were 2 other who had the same issue with coins they send to coinmarket. They wouldn't release private keys to the addresses(understandable) but they can import the private key into their digibyte client and redeem them for you. I can't say if they will or won't as thats really up to the exchange, but it is possible to retrieve them. @Digibyte It seems that a few people now have done this. There was a discussion a while ago about changing "DGB" to "DIGI". I personally was in favour of DIGI at the time & still am. Is this discussion now dead or could we arrange a vote on it before Digibyte becomes even more widely adopted? It would be a shame if someone ever loses a large holding because of this avoidable issue. I've been considering this and I haven't come up with a way to do this without invalidating every current DGB address, which is not a good plan. You can change the name to DIGI from DGB but the root of the problem will still exist. Any coin based off the bitcoin source and having address's starting with 'D' will have addresses that are valid on each others network. I don't believe theres any way around it at this point. If someone has a solution I'm all ear! xploited is suddenly x2 on the cool scale; as they have only one ear and are obviously a pirate.
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xploited
Sr. Member
Offline
Activity: 304
Merit: 252
CLAM Dev
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February 08, 2014, 07:25:13 AM |
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What a dilemma, I sent 10,000 Digibyte coins to an exchange, I generated a deposit address and sent the the coins only to realise that I sent them to a different coin wallet, in my haste I made the mistake of mistaking Digital coin For Digibyte coin as the shortened letters for both coins are very similar and could be mistaken for each other, I was lead to believe that you can't actually send coins to a different coin wallet the client doesn't let you, in this case it did. Obviously these coins never arrived at the exchange and now they are floating around lost in space and time, maybe in a hundred thousand years someone will download a Digibyte client and it will randomly generate the address and the recipient will be a billionaire in a split second. oh well some you win and some you lose. You can contact the exchange. They might be be able to help you out. There were 2 other who had the same issue with coins they send to coinmarket. They wouldn't release private keys to the addresses(understandable) but they can import the private key into their digibyte client and redeem them for you. I can't say if they will or won't as thats really up to the exchange, but it is possible to retrieve them. @Digibyte It seems that a few people now have done this. There was a discussion a while ago about changing "DGB" to "DIGI". I personally was in favour of DIGI at the time & still am. Is this discussion now dead or could we arrange a vote on it before Digibyte becomes even more widely adopted? It would be a shame if someone ever loses a large holding because of this avoidable issue. I've been considering this and I haven't come up with a way to do this without invalidating every current DGB address, which is not a good plan. You can change the name to DIGI from DGB but the root of the problem will still exist. Any coin based off the bitcoin source and having address's starting with 'D' will have addresses that are valid on each others network. I don't believe theres any way around it at this point. If someone has a solution I'm all ear! xploited is suddenly x2 on the cool scale; as they have only one ear and are obviously a pirate. No no no, I'm not a pirate. I'm the van gogh of crypto
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srknbyr
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February 08, 2014, 07:35:26 AM |
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Hello digibyters this is my friend's pool. Fast and stable. It's already over 430.081 Mhs, join us http://digi.coinium.org/
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.▄███████████████████████▄ ███████████████████████████ ██████▌▄ ▀▀▀█████████ █████████▄ ▀██████ ██████████▄ ▀█████ ███████████ █████ ███████████ █████ ███████████ ▄██▄ █████ ███████████▄▄▄▄█████ ▄█████ ███████████████████████████ ███████████████████████████ ███████████████████████████ ▀███████████████████████▀ | .digilira. | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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