Phinnaeus Gage (OP)
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Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
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December 23, 2011, 11:35:47 PM |
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I'm a bit busy right now but the new suggestion for the subject is better. However, I think it's too long. As far as email subjects are concerned, there are a few rules.
1) Keep it simple 2) Keep it simple 3) And so on
The very first text paragraph should then contain the info that can't fit the subject. So I think trimming it a little and then summarizing in the first paragraph and explaining it a little more after that is the way to go.
So short and simple for the subject, a short and to the point first paragraph and finally a few paragraphs containing the details. I'd create my own suggestions if I wasn't busy right now but I hope this helps.
Actually, the current subject revision fits almost perfectly as the very first paragraph of the email. For a subject it simply contains too much information.
Thank you kindly, Technomage, for your valuable input.
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Phinnaeus Gage (OP)
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Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
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December 23, 2011, 11:48:05 PM |
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I haven't read this thread since about page three and now it's on page 27!
Was thinking last night about what the criteria is for donations so will pose the question as follows.
One of the things we support in our house (mainly my wife) is the local homeless shelter. They have a building, a small budget and I think three people that actually donate. We sourced a bunch of coats/jackets during the winter for them, blankets and we have a regular food order for them as otherwise they wouldn't get anything on a Sunday night. i.e. this is a very low key org, not like the competing church mission with it's million/year budget. Tomorrow we'll drop some food around to them for Christmas.
So, this is a small org, helping people that would normally sleep out of doors (as it's summer, it's a little better at the moment) and assisting them re-integrate into more mainstream society. Would it qualify?
Depends! Website? Years on line? Reach? Backlinks? Basically those key questions for starters, with possibly a few minor ones to follow. http://dcm.org.nz/Links/nightshelter.htmlNot sure about all the questions, but the link points in the right direction I think. Attention, all!: Serious discussion is warranted here!
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sadpandatech
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December 24, 2011, 12:09:23 AM |
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#Bah, my first one would have been fine then. I have condensed it to be more fitting to an email subject and present it along with Revision 4. #Again, please note that the formatting is not displayed correctly here. Rev. 4 23rd of December 2011 Please include Bitcoin as a funding option.Dear Org, Choosing Bitcoin as an additional donation option allows [Org here] to utilize 100% of donated funds, benefiting more in need. We write you today representing a group of 100+ people who humbly request that you consider accepting Bitcoins as an option to donate funds to your cause. Bitcoin100 consists of 100 members from a community of Bitcoin enthusiasts, developers and ordinary folk, just like you. We wish to support your charity and would like to do so by giving with bitcoins. We have each pledged atleast 1 bitcoin to donate to [charity name] and look forward to doing so. Presently, 100 Bitcoins are worth $393 USD. You can read more about Bitcoin100 and its supporters here. And some of the other charities we wish to give to on our Bitcoin100 charity list. Being a charitable entity makes it even easier to accept Bitcoins as donations. You will not have to learn the client or other technical aspects of the technology unless you choose to. There exists a payment processor that will take your bitcoin donations, collect any desirable donor information and deposit funds into your bank account on your behalf. This service known as Bit-Pay has absolutely no fees for non-profit organizations. You can read more about the services for non- profits from Bit-Pay. As soon as a 'Donate with Bitcoins' option can be found with your regular online donation information we pledge to send the current pool of 100 Bitcoins to the address listed there. Bitcoins are a digital currency whose transactions are recorded, shared and secured by a completely decentralized network. Bitcoins will benefit your organization because they can be sent to any other user around the globe with internet access, nearly instantly and with no mandated fees. More information about the technology can be found at We use Coins. Along with a user friendly getting started guide, for most typical users. The open source project's website can be found here Bitcoin.org Thank you very much for your consideration of accepting Bitcoins as a viable option to help fund your cause. If you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact me by email; [redacted] or by phone @ [redacted] Sincerely, Derek Herndon Bitcoin100 Pledger
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If you're not excited by the idea of being an early adopter 'now', then you should come back in three or four years and either tell us "Told you it'd never work!" or join what should, by then, be a much more stable and easier-to-use system. - GA
It is being worked on by smart people. -DamienBlack
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sadpandatech
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December 24, 2011, 12:15:26 AM |
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Was thinking last night about what the criteria is for donations so will pose the question as follows. i.e., this is a very low key org, not like the competing church mission with it's million/year budget. Would it qualify?
Depends! Website? Years on line? Reach? Backlinks? Basically those key questions for starters, with possibly a few minor ones to follow. http://dcm.org.nz/Links/nightshelter.htmlNot sure about all the questions, but the link points in the right direction I think. Attention, all!: Serious discussion is warranted here!I was pondering some of the implications of considering size of the charity. My wife and I also give regulary to small, local causes. Most of which don't have a means to collect funds from outside of their communities. I don't see any reason not to include smaller ones on the list as long as they have some sort of web presence and accept monetary donations. Maybe we could snip this whole segment and port it over to the Charity List for further discussion? cheers
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If you're not excited by the idea of being an early adopter 'now', then you should come back in three or four years and either tell us "Told you it'd never work!" or join what should, by then, be a much more stable and easier-to-use system. - GA
It is being worked on by smart people. -DamienBlack
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Phinnaeus Gage (OP)
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Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
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December 24, 2011, 12:26:38 AM |
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Was thinking last night about what the criteria is for donations so will pose the question as follows. i.e., this is a very low key org, not like the competing church mission with it's million/year budget. Would it qualify?
Depends! Website? Years on line? Reach? Backlinks? Basically those key questions for starters, with possibly a few minor ones to follow. http://dcm.org.nz/Links/nightshelter.htmlNot sure about all the questions, but the link points in the right direction I think. Attention, all!: Serious discussion is warranted here!I was pondering some of the implications of considering size of the charity. My wife and I also give regulary to small, local causes. Most of which don't have a means to collect funds from outside of their communities. I don't see any reason not to include smaller ones on the list as long as they have some sort of web presence and accept monetary donations. Maybe we could snip this whole segment and port it over to the Charity List for further discussion? cheers I'm currently under the impression that PatrickHarnett owns this site or, at the very least, is directly connected to this organization, neither of which is relative if that so be the case, but would beg the question as to why a Bitcoin donation option is not already embedded on the website. Good idea on exporting this, Derek.
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paraipan
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Firstbits: 1pirata
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December 24, 2011, 12:38:15 AM |
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wow, nice work ppl and kudos to you sadpandatech the letter is great but i only have one issue, can we move the bit-pay paragraph a bit lower ? For a first contact with bitcoin, from this letter, you get the impression it depends on a central service and i'm sure we don't want that. Switching the bit-pay paragraph with the one that contains "We Use Coins" should be fine. My two Satoshis.
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BTCitcoin: An Idea Worth Saving - Q&A with bitcoins on rugatu.com - Check my rep
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sadpandatech
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December 24, 2011, 12:59:44 AM |
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wow, nice work ppl and kudos to you sadpandatech the letter is great but i only have one issue, can we move the bit-pay paragraph a bit lower ? For a first contact with bitcoin, from this letter, you get the impression it depends on a central service and i'm sure we don't want that. Switching the bit-pay paragraph with the one that contains "We Use Coins" should be fine. My two Satoshis. hehe, figures it was the other way and after reading over the thing 20 times I finally decided to flip those paragraphs. I wanted to get the reader to the point of just how they would process the donations as soon as possible. I do see where you are coming from and I agree but am on the fence between, 'show decentralization' or 'show payment processing' first. Thank you kindly for your input. Anyone else have a take on this aspect of it?
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If you're not excited by the idea of being an early adopter 'now', then you should come back in three or four years and either tell us "Told you it'd never work!" or join what should, by then, be a much more stable and easier-to-use system. - GA
It is being worked on by smart people. -DamienBlack
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PatrickHarnett
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December 24, 2011, 04:10:58 AM |
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I'm currently under the impression that PatrickHarnett owns this site or, at the very least, is directly connected to this organization, neither of which is relative if that so be the case, but would beg the question as to why a Bitcoin donation option is not already embedded on the website.
Nope. Don't really know anything about them (DCM.org.nz). My wife deals with Mike at the shelter and they have space for 23 regulars and some other more casuals. We worked on a one local, one national and one international as a way of directing some charity. So we also give money to the books-in-homes program and sponsor a decile 1 school (that's the poor end and fills in the National aspect), but I also have no special link to that program - but we did help the year 5 and 6 classes come to Wellington and covered the costs of their over-night at the zoo. We have a sponsored child in Bangladesh, and I also do Kiva (the micro lending site for fun - up to 43 loans over there). It's just random.
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Technomage
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Affordable Physical Bitcoins - Denarium.com
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December 24, 2011, 08:50:39 AM |
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After some thinking and talking to my gf I came to the conclusion that the paragraph order in the 4th revision is actually slightly better. It's simply secondary to them how the technology works so it makes sense to save it for last. Excellent work. I'm now happy with the subject as well, it's much better. The dot at the end isn't necessary though, it's not used in subjects generally. I'm thrilled of how well this project is going. The Bitcoin community is full of smart and decent people who understand the numerous benefits that will come of this. I'm excited about the next step and confident that we'll be very successful. Keep up the good work and Merry Christmas to all of you
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Denarium closing sale discounts now up to 43%! Check out our products from here!
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Bitcoin 100
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December 24, 2011, 09:09:56 AM Last edit: December 24, 2011, 09:36:29 AM by Bitcoin 100 |
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Presenting another edit in the form of an actual email to gain a better feel of how it would look from the readers standpoint. For some crazy reason, I opt to write it in E-Prime, compounding the challenge and only adding a couple extra hours to the rewrite. Once again, feel free to reedit and offer up suggestions. Thanks again, to Derek, for taking the initiative in getting this ball rolling.
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital 262 Danny Thomas Place Memphis, TN 38105-3678 December 24, 2011 Please include Bitcoin as a funding optionDear St. Jude (Donation Department) Choosing Bitcoin as an additional donation option allows St. Jude to utilize 100% of funds gifted, thereby benefiting more children in need. We write you today representing a group of 100+ individuals who humbly request your kind consideration of accepting Bitcoin as a donation option, further endowing your acclaimed foundation. Bitcoin100 consists of over 100 members from a community of Bitcoin enthusiasts, developers and common folk, like you. We wish to support St. Jude by contributing to your noble organization a generous gift of 100 bitcoins (100 BTC), currently valued at approximately $391.00. Furthermore, supporters of Bitcoin100 have pledged to continue their support of nonprofit and charitable organizations, like St. Jude, who have included Bitcoin as one of their donation options, thus enabling us to continue our benevolent practice. Additional information pertaining to Bitcoin100 and its supporters, provided here, with our evolving charity list pending contact, available here. As a charitable organization, St. Jude can easily accept Bitcoin as a donation option. The accounting departing will not have to learn any new technological skill sets associated with Bitcoin unless they choose to. A payment processing service, Bit-Pay, will convert bitcoins donated to St. Jude into US dollars, ready for deposit into your bank account. Bit-Pay offers nonprofit organizations this service with absolutely zero fees, unlike other typical processing systems, stretching those harder-to-come-by dollars into providing more for the children and their parents. Further reading about the services for nonprofits provided by Bit-Pay available here. Once St. Jude implements a 'Donate with Bitcoin' option--conveniently located among the other formidable donation options on your website--we pledge to send the current pool of 100 bitcoins (100 BTC), nearly $400, to your newly listed Bitcoin donation address. Bitcoin will benefit St. Jude, or any other charitable organization, because of the ability in accepting donations from around the globe, via any internet access nearly instantly, without mandated fees. Bitcoin, a secured digital currency, operates on a completely decentralized network, sharing all recorded transactions. To learn more about this remarkable technology, visit We use Coins at weusecoins.com. Read the user-friendly starter guide, a resource where most of today's users have familiarized themselves with Bitcoin. Then visit bitcoin.org, the open source website, a more in-depth tutorial. Thank you kindly for your valuable time and consideration of accepting Bitcoin as a viable option to help fund your admirable cause. If you have any questions or concerns feel free to contact me by email @ [redacted] or by phone @ [redacted] Sincerely, Derek Herndon Bitcoin100 Supporter DH:dh
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istar
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December 24, 2011, 11:03:46 AM |
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But we need to think longterm.
We dont want an organisation to put up an adress, we send them our coins.
They dont get any more coins and after a few months the adress is removed. Perhaps by someone who thinks Bitcoins are for criminals.
We need to give them one donation now and one more donation after another year.
Also a small question, how come the adress has sent some coins? 1BTC1oo1J3MEt5SFj74ZBcF2Mk97Aah4ac
Add me to the list.
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Bitcoins - Because we should not pay to use our money
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mcorlett
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December 24, 2011, 01:49:33 PM |
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Also a small question, how come the adress has sent some coins? 1BTC1oo1J3MEt5SFj74ZBcF2Mk97Aah4ac
Looks like there was a mix-up and the donator gave his consent to have the funds moved. If you've noticed the decreased balance in the wallet at blockexplorer, it's because 9 BTC were removed and placed into a separate wallet to be doled out 1 BTC at a time toward subsequent wallets, per gsan's instructions. He originally donated 10 BTC into the current wallet, falsely thinking that it was the main pool of which would fund future charitable organizations. Rassah has control of this wallet, as well.
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sadpandatech
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December 24, 2011, 05:07:46 PM |
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Thank you, Technomage, Bruno and Istar for your valuable additions. Not sure how that period snuck in there on me. As long as we all agree on the template and its order of information and prose, then I will polish it up for grammar and verbage before submitting it to each charity. @Technomage Thanks, I wrestled with that a bit but feel my mother, an English major would probably agree. Though she would likely also grimace over not sending the more elegant letter that was the first draft. ;p I was absolutly horrible at 'American English', though I excelled at most everything else. I always felt the writer should have the freedom to captivate the audiences' emotions with his grammar. Sadly the teachers did not agree and I could not wrap my head around the 'properness' of modern english. cheers @Bruno Thank you for adjusting the verbage to flow better. I will take into consideration and add in some of your suggestions as I am polishing. @Istar Thank you for pointing that out. While I would like to think anyone who bothered to add the Bitcoin option would just leave it in place, as it costs them little to no extra manpower to do so. You have a very valid point. I likely would not go as far as stating a stipulation in our approach that they were obligated to keep it there. I feel we should discuss how best to follow up with the ones that have accepted bitcoins. Coming back to them after some period of time may be one option. It will also be prudent of us to make sure that any organization that does accept bitcoins is added to the wiki and that we make a thread here to list the charities that accept bitcoins. Between the wiki and forum thread it will be benefecial to the charity in the extra traffic it will generate to their causes. Questions; Should we aim to send out to our letter to the first 10 charities on our list all at once or should we send one at a time and give each charity some small amount of time to respond before moving on to the next one? If we decide to send it to one at a time should St. Jude be our first contact? Note; Please forgive me if I am slow to respond. We are hosting dinner at my house this afternoon and tommorow is Christmas. I don't intend to be too far form my office here, but don't want anyone to feel I am ignoring them or went missing. Merry Christmas, Derek
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If you're not excited by the idea of being an early adopter 'now', then you should come back in three or four years and either tell us "Told you it'd never work!" or join what should, by then, be a much more stable and easier-to-use system. - GA
It is being worked on by smart people. -DamienBlack
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Phinnaeus Gage (OP)
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Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
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December 24, 2011, 07:39:48 PM |
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But we need to think longterm.
We dont want an organisation to put up an adress, we send them our coins.
They dont get any more coins and after a few months the adress is removed. Perhaps by someone who thinks Bitcoins are for criminals.
We need to give them one donation now and one more donation after another year.
Also a small question, how come the adress has sent some coins? 1BTC1oo1J3MEt5SFj74ZBcF2Mk97Aah4ac
Add me to the list.
Thank you kindly, istar, for becoming a supporter of Bitcoin100. You have been added to the list. I see that your questions has been answered fully with the following quote: Also a small question, how come the adress has sent some coins? 1BTC1oo1J3MEt5SFj74ZBcF2Mk97Aah4ac
Looks like there was a mix-up and the donator gave his consent to have the funds moved. If you've noticed the decreased balance in the wallet at blockexplorer, it's because 9 BTC were removed and placed into a separate wallet to be doled out 1 BTC at a time toward subsequent wallets, per gsan's instructions. He originally donated 10 BTC into the current wallet, falsely thinking that it was the main pool of which would fund future charitable organizations. Rassah has control of this wallet, as well.
Thank you, mcorlett, for providing that answer to istar. Only 5 more users need to pledge (not donate) to bring the list up to 100 supporters. This would make a fine Christmas gift to the Bitcoin community if we can make this happen. ~Bruno~
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Bitcoin 100
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December 24, 2011, 08:03:06 PM |
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Thank you, Technomage, Bruno and Istar for your valuable additions. Not sure how that period snuck in there on me. As long as we all agree on the template and its order of information and prose, then I will polish it up for grammar and verbage before submitting it to each charity. @Technomage Thanks, I wrestled with that a bit but feel my mother, an English major would probably agree. Though she would likely also grimace over not sending the more elegant letter that was the first draft. ;p I was absolutly horrible at 'American English', though I excelled at most everything else. I always felt the writer should have the freedom to captivate the audiences' emotions with his grammar. Sadly the teachers did not agree and I could not wrap my head around the 'properness' of modern english. cheers @Bruno Thank you for adjusting the verbage to flow better. I will take into consideration and add in some of your suggestions as I am polishing. @Istar Thank you for pointing that out. While I would like to think anyone who bothered to add the Bitcoin option would just leave it in place, as it costs them little to no extra manpower to do so. You have a very valid point. I likely would not go as far as stating a stipulation in our approach that they were obligated to keep it there. I feel we should discuss how best to follow up with the ones that have accepted bitcoins. Coming back to them after some period of time may be one option. It will also be prudent of us to make sure that any organization that does accept bitcoins is added to the wiki and that we make a thread here to list the charities that accept bitcoins. Between the wiki and forum thread it will be benefecial to the charity in the extra traffic it will generate to their causes. Questions; Should we aim to send out to our letter to the first 10 charities on our list all at once or should we send one at a time and give each charity some small amount of time to respond before moving on to the next one? If we decide to send it to one at a time should St. Jude be our first contact? Note; Please forgive me if I am slow to respond. We are hosting dinner at my house this afternoon and tommorow is Christmas. I don't intend to be too far form my office here, but don't want anyone to feel I am ignoring them or went missing. Merry Christmas, Derek I, too, am looking for suggestions as to verbiage of my rewrite. I feel that although not perfect, it engages the reader, hopefully to further warrant a response, which is the hope here. I wanted the letter to be as personal as possible, but not come across as corny, poorly written or, surely not in a do-this-or-else tone. I hoped my letter reached that objective, but if it misses that mark somehow please, anybody, improve upon it. I need to state that this is not a contest as to which letter is better, for mine was all based upon Derek's hard efforts. I also feel that we both have the same level of the English language, albeit limited, hence asking for help from this fine community where better wordsmiths lurk. evoorhees and Matthew come to mine, among the others who've already kindly put in input the last 24 hours. Should we aim to send out to our letter to the first 10 charities on our list all at once or should we send one at a time and give each charity some small amount of time to respond before moving on to the next one? If we decide to send it to one at a time should St. Jude be our first contact? I think we're leaning toward one at time, with St. Jude only being a suggestion. This aspect is definitely open for discussion, though no harm done, I believe, if one is sent out prior to a consensus. It will also be prudent of us to make sure that any organization that does accept bitcoins is added to the wiki and that we make a thread here to list the charities that accept bitcoins. Between the wiki and forum thread it will be benefecial to the charity in the extra traffic it will generate to their causes. This information will be available on the website at bitcoin100.org with links, write-ups, etc. ...before submitting it to each charity. I like how this is coming together. Grab a position and run with it. Derek takes care of all the initial email contacts. Thank you, Derek, for taking control of this aspect as well as all your hard effort, to date. From an outside, it may look simple, but at our end, it's a challenge. A challenge we accept open-heartedly. ~Bruno~
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sadpandatech
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December 24, 2011, 09:03:49 PM |
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I see now I was mispelling verbiage as well. Once things quiet down a bit at my house, this evening I will pop up a final draft and hopefully get our first one sent out for Christmas. Cheers, Derek
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If you're not excited by the idea of being an early adopter 'now', then you should come back in three or four years and either tell us "Told you it'd never work!" or join what should, by then, be a much more stable and easier-to-use system. - GA
It is being worked on by smart people. -DamienBlack
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Bitcoin 100
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December 25, 2011, 02:27:24 AM Last edit: December 25, 2011, 02:44:53 AM by Bitcoin 100 |
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I'm formally requesting honest criticism and opinions of the effectiveness of the following letter. Pretend, if you will, that you just received such a letter. Does it do it's job well in calling for a course of action, or would you simply file or delete it? Would you past it on to upper management? Feel free to criticize as strongly as possible. I have thick skin. Consider quoting the letter and highlighting your concerns (and short comments within the letter) in red, as did in the example below. ~Bruno~ The following is written in E-Prime. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-PrimeSt. Jude Children's Research Hospital 262 Danny Thomas Place Memphis, TN 38105-3678 December 24, 2011 Please include Bitcoin as a funding optionDear St. Jude (Donation Department) (is this proper?) (comma after St. Jude?)Choosing Bitcoin as an additional donation option allows St. Jude to utilize 100% of funds gifted, thereby benefiting more children in need. We write you today representing a group of 100+ individuals who humbly request your kind consideration of accepting Bitcoin as a donation option, further endowing your acclaimed foundation. Bitcoin100 consists of over 100 members from a community of Bitcoin enthusiasts, developers and common folk, like you. We wish to support St. Jude by contributing to your noble organization a generous gift of 100 bitcoins (100 BTC), currently valued at approximately $391.00. Furthermore, supporters of Bitcoin100 have pledged to continue their support of nonprofit and charitable organizations, like St. Jude, who have included Bitcoin as one of their donation options, thus enabling us to continue our benevolent practice. Additional information pertaining to Bitcoin100 and its supporters, provided here, with our evolving charity list pending contact, available here. As a charitable organization, St. Jude can easily accept Bitcoin as a donation option. The accounting departing will not have to learn any new technological skill sets associated with Bitcoin unless they choose to. A payment processing service, Bit-Pay, will convert bitcoins donated to St. Jude into US dollars, ready for deposit into your bank account. Bit-Pay offers nonprofit organizations this service with absolutely zero fees, unlike other typical processing systems, stretching those harder-to-come-by dollars into providing more for the children and their parents. Further reading about the services for nonprofits provided by Bit-Pay available here. Once St. Jude implements a 'Donate with Bitcoin' option--conveniently located among the other formidable donation options on your website--we pledge to send the current pool of 100 bitcoins (100 BTC), nearly $400, to your newly listed Bitcoin donation address. Bitcoin will benefit St. Jude, or any other charitable organization, because of the ability in accepting donations from around the globe, via any internet access nearly instantly, without mandated fees. Bitcoin, a secured digital currency, operates on a completely decentralized network, sharing all recorded transactions. To learn more about this remarkable technology, visit We use Coins at weusecoins.com. Read the user-friendly starter guide, a resource where most of today's users have familiarized themselves with Bitcoin. Then visit bitcoin.org, the open source website, a more in-depth tutorial. Thank you kindly for your valuable time and consideration of accepting Bitcoin as a viable option to help fund your admirable cause. If you have any questions or concerns feel free to contact me by email @ [redacted] or by phone @ [redacted] Sincerely, Derek Herndon Bitcoin100 Supporter DH:dh (needed/required?)
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Phinnaeus Gage (OP)
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Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
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December 25, 2011, 06:16:58 AM |
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Cool, I sent you 1 BTC for the BitCoin 100. Not a bad idea. I generally try to support the BitCoin community. I'm sad I missed the guess. But hey, if I was never wrong, I would be relaxing somewhere. I'll get with you after the holidays on the wallet. Thnx. (bought forward from another thread) Thank you, BTC_Bear for pledging, then honoring 1 BTC thus becoming a supporter of Bitcoin100. The list in the OP has been updated reflecting your contribution. ~Bruno~
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Bitcoin 100
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December 25, 2011, 05:50:45 PM Last edit: December 25, 2011, 06:08:51 PM by Bitcoin 100 |
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Ok, I'm going to get blasted for this but I'm gonna do it anyway. I think the letter is to "wordy" for an introduction letter. I said before, "A few tweaks of a good letter one way or another is unlikely to have a monstrous effect on how it's perceived." I was clearly wrong. It has been tweaked so much now that it's too long, contains too much info and might go straight to the trash before reading past the second paragraph. I reworked it a little but clearly this isn't perfect. Could we have it become more of an initial introduction instead of a Bitcoin life story?
I represent a group of benefactors which would like you to consider an alternative method of accepting donations. We are called the Bitcoin100.
Our group consists of over 100 members of a community which uses Bitcoin as a method of monetary exchange worldwide. We wish to support St. Jude by contributing to your noble organization a generous gift of 100 bitcoins (100 BTC), currently valued at approximately $391.00. Furthermore, supporters of Bitcoin100 have pledged to continue their support of nonprofit and charitable organizations, like St. Jude, who have included Bitcoin as one of their donation options. Additional information pertaining to Bitcoin100 and its supporters can be researched here and contact information is available here.
As a charitable organization, St. Jude can easily accept Bitcoin as a donation option. Your accounting departing will not require retraining to accept these funds because they will be converted to U. S. dollars for you at no cost. A payment processing service called Bit-Pay will convert bitcoins donated to St. Jude into US dollars, ready for deposit into your bank account. Bit-Pay offers nonprofit organizations this service with absolutely zero fees, unlike other typical processing systems (Further reading about the services for nonprofits provided by Bit-Pay available here.) Once St. Jude implements a 'Donate with Bitcoin' option--conveniently located among the other formidable donation options on your website--we pledge to send the current pool of 100 bitcoins (100 BTC), nearly $400, to your newly listed Bitcoin donation address.
Bitcoin will benefit St. Jude because of its ability to accept donations from around the globe via any convenient internet access almost instantly. The normally required fees will be generously eliminated by Bit-Pay leaving you with the complete original donation. Choosing Bitcoin as an additional donation option will allow St. Jude to utilize 100% of funds gifted, thereby benefiting more children in need.
Thank you kindly for your valuable time and consideration of accepting Bitcoin as a viable option to help fund your admirable cause. I would greatly appreciate the opportunity to explain this in greater detail and assist you in setting up this payment method on your website. Please contact me by email @ [redacted] or by phone @ [redacted]
I'm about to read your revision, but desired to state first that you won't get blasted for your valuable contribution. Thank you, CBH. ~Bruno~ EDIT: The word 'retaining' is beginning to make sense to me after rereading the letter.
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Bitcoin 100
Member
Offline
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
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December 25, 2011, 06:03:16 PM |
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SOB! WOW! Thoughts from others? (only a couple corrections and concerns in red). CornedBeefHash, I must declare you've outdone yourself. I now feel that any other revisions should be minor, using CBH's letter below as the one to go with. All other major concerns are still welcome regarding this very important issue. I represent a group of benefactors which would like you to consider an alternative method of accepting donations. We are called the Bitcoin100.
Our group consists of over 100 members of a community which uses Bitcoin as a method of monetary exchange worldwide. We wish to support St. Jude by contributing to your noble organization a generous gift of 100 bitcoins (100 BTC), currently valued at approximately $391.00. Furthermore, supporters of Bitcoin100 have pledged to continue their support of nonprofit and charitable organizations, like St. Jude, who have included Bitcoin as one of their donation options. Additional information pertaining to Bitcoin100 and its supporters can be researched here and contact information is available here.
As a charitable organization, St. Jude can easily accept Bitcoin as a donation option. Your accounting departing will not require retraining to accept these funds because they will be converted to U. S. dollars for you at no cost. A payment processing service called Bit-Pay will convert bitcoins donated to St. Jude into US dollars, ready for deposit into your bank account. Bit-Pay offers nonprofit organizations this service with absolutely zero fees, unlike other typical processing systems (Further reading about the services for nonprofits provided by Bit-Pay available here). Once St. Jude implements a 'Donate with Bitcoin' option--conveniently located among the other formidable donation options on your website--we pledge to send the current pool of 100 bitcoins (100 BTC), nearly $400, to your newly listed Bitcoin donation address.
Bitcoin will benefit St. Jude because of its ability to accept donations from around the globe via any convenient internet access almost instantly. The normally required fees will be generously eliminated by Bit-Pay leaving you with the complete original donation. Choosing Bitcoin as an additional donation option will allow St. Jude to utilize 100% of funds gifted, thereby benefiting more children in need.
Thank you kindly for your valuable time and consideration of accepting Bitcoin as a viable option to help fund your admirable cause. I would greatly appreciate the opportunity to explain this in greater detail and assist you in setting up this payment method on your website. Please contact me by email @ [redacted] or by phone @ [redacted] I highlighted the word 'retaining' for I, personally, can't figure out what is exactly being expressed here. Please correct me if I'm in error due to my ignorance. Yes, I could easily Google it, but opt to express my feelings with the hope others can state that I'm right or wrong. In no way am I trying to be hypercritical in this with one word. Once again, thank you, CornedBeefHash. ~Bruno~ EDIT. The word 'retaining' is beginning to make sense to me after rereading it a couple more times.
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