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Author Topic: [XMR] Monero Speculation  (Read 3313051 times)
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rpietila
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October 19, 2014, 09:17:46 PM
 #1081

Rpetilia have you thought about bundling a miner into your game that mines gold straight to a user's account?

Gold is POS, it does not need to be mined. But a monero miner would be a nice addition for many: after all their balance is kept in moneritos, and IIRC you can CPU-mine a few moneros per month. A house costs about 10 XMR in the game, so it's a real boost to the balances Smiley

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October 19, 2014, 09:20:52 PM
 #1082

I agree with you binaryFate. The last missives said there should be a new revision of the in-progress client within 1-2 weeks (from last Monday).

2. The GUI, too, is progressing at a slightly reduced pace. We hope to update the preview binaries in the next week or two.

I'm not sure the GUI is really enough though. It will give a one-time bump in interest once it reaches a minimally usable stage, but beyond that more needs to happen to increase the size of the user base. Some of those things are external. For example, right now my feeling is that the entire cryptocurrency phenomenon is also in a similar place (in terms of user base being stagnant and not really reaching new markets at all).




Exactly.   Look ... assume a gui will take ALL the users from bbr.  That's 500k worth of growth.  Since bbr already has a userbase and it's own market it's nieve to think the gui is worth more in growth than all of bbr.

I'm not sure there is much that can be done to the coin that will increase growth.  People who are interested in Monero as an anon crypto are bought in already.

Making the mining algo less friendly to bonnets and more friendly to everyday pc users might help if it could be integrated with real life uses for small amounts.

. I leave my computer mining at the office for a week and I can bet on poker, fantasy football, play rpettlias game, bet on winning Civ 4 tournaments, etc might grow the userbase.

The key being get more of the pie to miners who are mining to use it rather than professional miners or bonnet farmers

Otherwise it will be external factors Imo

. Pulling in the darkmarkets.

. Increased government regulation and focus on crypto that drives a boom in anon.

. Greater bit coin adoption.

I believe in the future crypto currency will be adopted due to external factors.  Monero just needs to make sure it's the defacto choice of anonymous currency and if/when this happens.  The leader in anon will be adopted.  But it is impossible to change external factors from inside the Monero ecosystem.

Rpetilia have you thought about bundling a miner into your game that mines gold straight to a user's account?


. Increased government regulation and focus on crypto that drives a boom in anon.

There's also the opposite. Increasing amount of tools to deduce Bitcoin's pseudo anonymity(Blockchain tracking/analysis programs). In the not too distant future, tools like that will be made public or for a price, and they will have great effects(negatively) on Bitcoin's privacy.
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October 19, 2014, 10:58:24 PM
 #1083

I agree with you binaryFate. The last missives said there should be a new revision of the in-progress client within 1-2 weeks (from last Monday).

2. The GUI, too, is progressing at a slightly reduced pace. We hope to update the preview binaries in the next week or two.

I'm not sure the GUI is really enough though. It will give a one-time bump in interest once it reaches a minimally usable stage, but beyond that more needs to happen to increase the size of the user base. Some of those things are external. For example, right now my feeling is that the entire cryptocurrency phenomenon is also in a similar place (in terms of user base being stagnant and not really reaching new markets at all).




Exactly.   Look ... assume a gui will take ALL the users from bbr.  That's 500k worth of growth.  Since bbr already has a userbase and it's own market it's nieve to think the gui is worth more in growth than all of bbr.

I'm not sure there is much that can be done to the coin that will increase growth.  People who are interested in Monero as an anon crypto are bought in already.

Making the mining algo less friendly to bonnets and more friendly to everyday pc users might help if it could be integrated with real life uses for small amounts.

. I leave my computer mining at the office for a week and I can bet on poker, fantasy football, play rpettlias game, bet on winning Civ 4 tournaments, etc might grow the userbase.

The key being get more of the pie to miners who are mining to use it rather than professional miners or bonnet farmers

Otherwise it will be external factors Imo

. Pulling in the darkmarkets.

. Increased government regulation and focus on crypto that drives a boom in anon.

. Greater bit coin adoption.

I believe in the future crypto currency will be adopted due to external factors.  Monero just needs to make sure it's the defacto choice of anonymous currency and if/when this happens.  The leader in anon will be adopted.  But it is impossible to change external factors from inside the Monero ecosystem.

Rpetilia have you thought about bundling a miner into your game that mines gold straight to a user's account?


. Increased government regulation and focus on crypto that drives a boom in anon.

There's also the opposite. Increasing amount of tools to deduce Bitcoin's pseudo anonymity(Blockchain tracking/analysis programs). In the not too distant future, tools like that will be made public or for a price, and they will have great effects(negatively) on Bitcoin's privacy.

bitcoin is what it is and that is great: it is a decentralised transparent ledger. I think it will even get more transparent - hopefully not leading to a fungibility crisis.

there will be without a doubt a second dominant ledger - a decentralised private ledger.

I do not know if in the end it will be monero - at this point of time it is not unlikely.
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October 19, 2014, 11:17:26 PM
 #1084

Making the mining algo less friendly to bonnets and more friendly to everyday pc users might help if it could be integrated with real life uses for small amounts.

I think this is highly confused. An everyday PC user is almost exactly identical to a botnet. In fact I've described a successful decentralized cryptocurrency (i.e. not one dominated by purpose-built GPU rigs and/or ASICs) as being a botnet that enlists the user's help to install it. For this reason Monero is the coin (among the top few dozen by market cap at least) that is most friendly to mining by everyday users.

The main reason botnets get so much attention is that so few actual users are using the coin (including mining), thus the proportion attributed to botnets becomes larger. Throw a few million (or more) actual users in the mix and botnets are tiny by comparison.

Anyway, I largely agree with the rest of your points and Come-In-Behind's similar comments.

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October 19, 2014, 11:27:53 PM
 #1085

Making the mining algo less friendly to bonnets and more friendly to everyday pc users might help if it could be integrated with real life uses for small amounts.

I think this is highly confused. An everyday PC user is almost exactly identical to a botnet. In fact I've described a successful decentralized cryptocurrency (i.e. not one dominated by purpose-built GPU rigs and/or ASICs) as being a botnet that enlists the user's help to install it. For this reason Monero is the coin (among the top few dozen by market cap at least) that is most friendly to mining by everyday users.

The main reason botnets get so much attention is that so few actual users are using the coin (including mining), thus the proportion attributed to botnets becomes larger. Throw a few million (or more) actual users in the mix and botnets are tiny by comparison.

Anyway, I largely agree with the rest of your points and Come-In-Behind's similar comments.



I could dig deeper into this but my impression is that the cryptonote algo isn't as efficient at punishing lower end older CPUs as it could be.  The tendency of botnets is to capture grandma's computer (Walmart computer from 3 years ago)  Not the gamers/hipsters/business professionals high end gaming pc/mac/ultrabook computer.

This might be a misperception on my part.  The newer the PC, the less likely to be infected by a botnet as the owner probably cares more about controlling his own hardware.

+9999 on the guy who mentioned security.  A wallet that limited withdrawals to a small amount per 24 hour period unless multisig from a second device was used.  And then sent a warning message to the second wallet (maybe phone thin wallet?) Would be amaxing.

I believe Ethereum is working on a method to force miners to keep the block chain on the local machine (would help in making botnets less of a factor)

I have a windows machine.  I refuse to use Linux even though I work in IT.  I live in fear of keeping too much on an exchange and more fear of keeping it on my local machine.
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October 19, 2014, 11:36:16 PM
 #1086

I could dig deeper into this but my impression is that the cryptonote algo isn't as efficient at punishing lower end older CPUs as it could be.  The tendency of botnets is to capture grandma's computer (Walmart computer from 3 years ago)  Not the gamers/hipsters/business professionals high end gaming pc/mac/ultrabook computer.

Well the question then is whether you want to exclude grandma and focus on gamers. I sure don't.

This is kind of an academic question right now though (since neither have any good reason to be interested), but an important distinction when it comes to statement of purpose longer term.

In fact on the altcoin observer thread we had an interesting discussion about a billion cell phones mining while on chargers.

The security idea is good. There have been some ideas I've seen to use multisig as a form of decentralized 2FA (both your PC and cell phone would have to sign a transaction for example).
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October 19, 2014, 11:45:39 PM
 #1087

I could dig deeper into this but my impression is that the cryptonote algo isn't as efficient at punishing lower end older CPUs as it could be.  The tendency of botnets is to capture grandma's computer (Walmart computer from 3 years ago)  Not the gamers/hipsters/business professionals high end gaming pc/mac/ultrabook computer.

Well the question then is whether you want to exclude grandma and focus on gamers. I sure don't.

This is kind of an academic question right now though (since neither have any good reason to be interested), but an important distinction when it comes to statement of purpose longer term.

In fact on the altcoin observer thread we had an interesting discussion about a billion cell phones mining while on chargers.

The security idea is good. There have been some ideas I've seen to use multisig as a form of decentralized 2FA (both your PC and cell phone would have to sign a transaction for example).


Yeah but you have to figure grandma isn't going to be mining crypto ... someone else is mining with grandma's computer.  I'm willing to give her up to get rid of botnets:p

But you are right.  It is an academic question.  If there was a way of forcing blockchain storage to mine I think that would do wonders because people would find it if botnets were being used.

Maybe someone needs to figure out how to incorporate a proof of consent.
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October 19, 2014, 11:51:20 PM
 #1088

I could dig deeper into this but my impression is that the cryptonote algo isn't as efficient at punishing lower end older CPUs as it could be.  The tendency of botnets is to capture grandma's computer (Walmart computer from 3 years ago)  Not the gamers/hipsters/business professionals high end gaming pc/mac/ultrabook computer.

Well the question then is whether you want to exclude grandma and focus on gamers. I sure don't.

This is kind of an academic question right now though (since neither have any good reason to be interested), but an important distinction when it comes to statement of purpose longer term.

In fact on the altcoin observer thread we had an interesting discussion about a billion cell phones mining while on chargers.

The security idea is good. There have been some ideas I've seen to use multisig as a form of decentralized 2FA (both your PC and cell phone would have to sign a transaction for example).


If the technical distinction between grandma and your voluntary miner is 3 years, forget about a relevant way to distinguish them in the POW. We cannot  assume that we will change the POW every 3 years, so this kind of question is of little relevance.

Monero's privacy and therefore fungibility are MUCH stronger than Bitcoin's. 
This makes Monero a better candidate to deserve the term "digital cash".
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October 19, 2014, 11:57:02 PM
 #1089

I could dig deeper into this but my impression is that the cryptonote algo isn't as efficient at punishing lower end older CPUs as it could be.  The tendency of botnets is to capture grandma's computer (Walmart computer from 3 years ago)  Not the gamers/hipsters/business professionals high end gaming pc/mac/ultrabook computer.

Well the question then is whether you want to exclude grandma and focus on gamers. I sure don't.

This is kind of an academic question right now though (since neither have any good reason to be interested), but an important distinction when it comes to statement of purpose longer term.

In fact on the altcoin observer thread we had an interesting discussion about a billion cell phones mining while on chargers.

The security idea is good. There have been some ideas I've seen to use multisig as a form of decentralized 2FA (both your PC and cell phone would have to sign a transaction for example).


If the technical distinction between grandma and your voluntary miner is 3 years, forget about a relevant way to distinguish them in the POW. We cannot  assume that we will change the POW every 3 years, so this kind of question is of little relevance.

Almost all Monero will be mined in 3 years.  So if initial distribution in mining matters.  It matters more now in early adoption when the release schedule is trying to drive adoption than it does in 3 years
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October 20, 2014, 12:06:26 AM
 #1090

I could dig deeper into this but my impression is that the cryptonote algo isn't as efficient at punishing lower end older CPUs as it could be.  The tendency of botnets is to capture grandma's computer (Walmart computer from 3 years ago)  Not the gamers/hipsters/business professionals high end gaming pc/mac/ultrabook computer.

Well the question then is whether you want to exclude grandma and focus on gamers. I sure don't.

This is kind of an academic question right now though (since neither have any good reason to be interested), but an important distinction when it comes to statement of purpose longer term.

In fact on the altcoin observer thread we had an interesting discussion about a billion cell phones mining while on chargers.

The security idea is good. There have been some ideas I've seen to use multisig as a form of decentralized 2FA (both your PC and cell phone would have to sign a transaction for example).


If the technical distinction between grandma and your voluntary miner is 3 years, forget about a relevant way to distinguish them in the POW. We cannot  assume that we will change the POW every 3 years, so this kind of question is of little relevance.

Almost all Monero will be mined in 3 years.

"Almost all" is misleading (it sounds to me like 99% or something, and down to just a maintenance reward or none at all). The actual number I've seen is something like 85% in 4 years, which means even if 4+ years there will be significant mining. The current proposal for a maintenance reward doesn't kick in for around 10 years or so.

Quote
So if initial distribution in mining matters.  It matters more now in early adoption when the release schedule is trying to drive adoption than it does in 3 years

That depends on the future value, which is impossible to know. Bitcoin rewards were cut in half, yet the value of a block (and of all mining) now is vastly higher than it was 2+ years ago.

In fact another way to look at the schedule of mining rewards would be to attach a current value at the time they are mined. By that measurement Bitcoin is much less than 60% mined or whatever the current number is assuming constant-value BTC.
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October 20, 2014, 12:08:52 AM
 #1091

If the technical distinction between grandma and your voluntary miner is 3 years, forget about a relevant way to distinguish them in the POW. We cannot  assume that we will change the POW every 3 years, so this kind of question is of little relevance.

This was composed as a reply to me, but I think we agree?

I see no reason to distinguish between different types of computers aside from the obvious fact that newer, more expensive ones will work faster and better than older ones (and at some point the even-older ones will stop working at all).
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October 20, 2014, 12:12:06 AM
 #1092

I could dig deeper into this but my impression is that the cryptonote algo isn't as efficient at punishing lower end older CPUs as it could be.  The tendency of botnets is to capture grandma's computer (Walmart computer from 3 years ago)  Not the gamers/hipsters/business professionals high end gaming pc/mac/ultrabook computer.

Well the question then is whether you want to exclude grandma and focus on gamers. I sure don't.

This is kind of an academic question right now though (since neither have any good reason to be interested), but an important distinction when it comes to statement of purpose longer term.

In fact on the altcoin observer thread we had an interesting discussion about a billion cell phones mining while on chargers.

The security idea is good. There have been some ideas I've seen to use multisig as a form of decentralized 2FA (both your PC and cell phone would have to sign a transaction for example).


If the technical distinction between grandma and your voluntary miner is 3 years, forget about a relevant way to distinguish them in the POW. We cannot  assume that we will change the POW every 3 years, so this kind of question is of little relevance.

Almost all Monero will be mined in 3 years.

"Almost all" is misleading (it sounds to me like 99% or something, and down to just a maintenance reward or none at all). The actual number I've seen is something like 85% in 4 years, which means even if 4+ years there will be significant mining. The current proposal for a maintenance reward doesn't kick in for around 10 years or so.

Quote
So if initial distribution in mining matters.  It matters more now in early adoption when the release schedule is trying to drive adoption than it does in 3 years

That depends on the future value, which is impossible to know. Bitcoin rewards were cut in half, yet the value of a block (and of all mining) now is vastly higher than it was 2+ years ago.

In fact another way to look at the schedule of mining rewards would be to attach a current value at the time they are mined. By that measurement Bitcoin is much less than 60% mined or whatever the current number is assuming constant-value BTC.

I see 85% as almost.  Basically I view distribution early on as something that was made to encourage early adoption / speculation.  So getting coins towards people who are going to use / save them initially (in my opinion) will increase adoption velocity more now than in 3 years.

But this is my opinion ... take it fwiw
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October 20, 2014, 12:18:22 AM
Last edit: October 20, 2014, 01:56:35 AM by smooth
 #1093

I see 85% as almost.  Basically I view distribution early on as something that was made to encourage early adoption / speculation.  So getting coins towards people who are going to use / save them initially (in my opinion) will increase adoption velocity more now than in 3 years.

But this is my opinion ... take it fwiw

85% is four years I think, not three (well 3.5 now that six months has passed since launch).

But in any case the scenario you had in mind is exactly what exists, except that the services don't exist. Someone who wants to bet a tiny amount on fantasy football or micro stakes poker or play Crypto Kingdom can mine right now on whatever computer they happen to have. They won't get a lot but they will get something.
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October 20, 2014, 12:50:40 AM
Last edit: October 20, 2014, 01:09:28 AM by Come-In-Behind
 #1094

I could dig deeper into this but my impression is that the cryptonote algo isn't as efficient at punishing lower end older CPUs as it could be.  The tendency of botnets is to capture grandma's computer (Walmart computer from 3 years ago)  Not the gamers/hipsters/business professionals high end gaming pc/mac/ultrabook computer.

Well the question then is whether you want to exclude grandma and focus on gamers. I sure don't.

This is kind of an academic question right now though (since neither have any good reason to be interested), but an important distinction when it comes to statement of purpose longer term.

In fact on the altcoin observer thread we had an interesting discussion about a billion cell phones mining while on chargers.

The security idea is good. There have been some ideas I've seen to use multisig as a form of decentralized 2FA (both your PC and cell phone would have to sign a transaction for example).


If the technical distinction between grandma and your voluntary miner is 3 years, forget about a relevant way to distinguish them in the POW. We cannot  assume that we will change the POW every 3 years, so this kind of question is of little relevance.

Almost all Monero will be mined in 3 years.

"Almost all" is misleading (it sounds to me like 99% or something, and down to just a maintenance reward or none at all). The actual number I've seen is something like 85% in 4 years, which means even if 4+ years there will be significant mining. The current proposal for a maintenance reward doesn't kick in for around 10 years or so.

Quote
So if initial distribution in mining matters.  It matters more now in early adoption when the release schedule is trying to drive adoption than it does in 3 years

That depends on the future value, which is impossible to know. Bitcoin rewards were cut in half, yet the value of a block (and of all mining) now is vastly higher than it was 2+ years ago.

In fact another way to look at the schedule of mining rewards would be to attach a current value at the time they are mined. By that measurement Bitcoin is much less than 60% mined or whatever the current number is assuming constant-value BTC.

I see 85% as almost.  Basically I view distribution early on as something that was made to encourage early adoption / speculation.  So getting coins towards people who are going to use / save them initially (in my opinion) will increase adoption velocity more now than in 3 years.

But this is my opinion ... take it fwiw

I look at it slightly differently. I view distribution as bad in cases like NXT, where all the coins were given to extremely few people and that of course would make it difficult to obtain a diverse distribution due to most of the coins being in relatively few hands. When it comes to good distribution, it's sort of a dilemma. Since  cryptocurrencies aren't as well known and used like we would want them to be, even the best of distributions wouldn't matter as much compared to a coin that has had decent distribution. Unless most of the world adopts a coin as a reserve currency of sorts, then distribution will always be criticized/can't be perfect. My thoughts are that it's the things built around a coin that matters. So payment gateways that allow XMR to be accepted to buy goods imo(which in itself, if the companies convert to fiat, would distribute the currency further), is what matters more than any type of distribution(as long as the distribution itself is decent)
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October 20, 2014, 01:32:33 AM
 #1095

I hold monero, but is it dead in the water?

What is your opinion and what are the reasons?
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October 20, 2014, 01:34:28 AM
 #1096

way far from death.

In summary, the Intel Management Engine and its applications are a backdoor with total access to and control over the rest of the PC. The ME is a threat to freedom, security, and privacy, and the libreboot project strongly recommends avoiding it entirely. Since recent versions of it can’t be removed, this means avoiding all recent generations of Intel hardware. details https://libreboot.org/faq.html#intelme --- https://tehnoetic.com/laptops --- https://store.vikings.net/x200-ryf-certfied
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October 20, 2014, 03:12:33 AM
 #1097

momentum is ever thus.  then it reverses and everyone gets excited with unrealistic visions, until the next reversal.  usually the turns are sufficiently volatile so that you can easily misinterpret the evidence as supportive of your chosen outcome.  right now we are in a bear pennant, but a new high about 0027 would turn it into a rising channel.  a channel rise to 0028 or better followed by a 2-4% decline would turn it into a cup n handle.

all of this is very short term, and largely irrelevant to the long term investment thesis which motivates me to continue accumulating:  xmr remains the most liquid and actively developed among all coins which provide rigorously verifiable assurances of privacy.  as such it is  still the leading candidate to fulfill the future role of the natural monopoly of dark instant global liquidity.

yes, that liquidity is inadequate for larger currency uses, but that will change very quickly when the natural beneficiaries of its value-add find its usability fit for their purposes.  that probably won't happen this year, given current project velocities on the software side.  this fact gives present accumulators a large edge.  it is an edge which comes with a painful carry cost, but it remains that most elusive and wonderful of things, a very large edge.

hopefully enough of us with the means and foresight to accumulate at the lows will recognize this situation so that the drawdown discomfort is minimized, and as little damage as possible is done to the present liquidity transfer capacity and efficiency of the coin, but it can still take a fair amount of price damage before it becomes unsuitable for transfers up to a few thousand USD, and that is quite adequate for the bootstrapping process to occur onve retail dark markets discover an easy to use crypto with strong privacy.

Give a man a fish and he eats for a day.  Give a man a Poisson distribution and he eats at random times independent of one another, at a constant known rate.
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October 20, 2014, 11:09:26 AM
 #1098

Almost all Monero will be mined in 3 years.

"Almost all" is misleading (it sounds to me like 99% or something, and down to just a maintenance reward or none at all). The actual number I've seen is something like 85% in 4 years, which means even if 4+ years there will be significant mining. The current proposal for a maintenance reward doesn't kick in for around 10 years or so.

Quote
So if initial distribution in mining matters.  It matters more now in early adoption when the release schedule is trying to drive adoption than it does in 3 years

That depends on the future value, which is impossible to know. Bitcoin rewards were cut in half, yet the value of a block (and of all mining) now is vastly higher than it was 2+ years ago.

In fact another way to look at the schedule of mining rewards would be to attach a current value at the time they are mined. By that measurement Bitcoin is much less than 60% mined or whatever the current number is assuming constant-value BTC.

I am worried if the transaction fee is not high enough in 4 years time, will miner still serve the network?
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October 20, 2014, 11:14:58 AM
 #1099

Almost all Monero will be mined in 3 years.

"Almost all" is misleading (it sounds to me like 99% or something, and down to just a maintenance reward or none at all). The actual number I've seen is something like 85% in 4 years, which means even if 4+ years there will be significant mining. The current proposal for a maintenance reward doesn't kick in for around 10 years or so.

Quote
So if initial distribution in mining matters.  It matters more now in early adoption when the release schedule is trying to drive adoption than it does in 3 years

That depends on the future value, which is impossible to know. Bitcoin rewards were cut in half, yet the value of a block (and of all mining) now is vastly higher than it was 2+ years ago.

In fact another way to look at the schedule of mining rewards would be to attach a current value at the time they are mined. By that measurement Bitcoin is much less than 60% mined or whatever the current number is assuming constant-value BTC.

I am worried if the transaction fee is not high enough in 4 years time, will miner still serve the network?

No, unless the price skyrockets.
Also high fees makes people avoid transacting with xmr.
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October 20, 2014, 11:25:51 AM
 #1100

Almost all Monero will be mined in 3 years.

"Almost all" is misleading (it sounds to me like 99% or something, and down to just a maintenance reward or none at all). The actual number I've seen is something like 85% in 4 years, which means even if 4+ years there will be significant mining. The current proposal for a maintenance reward doesn't kick in for around 10 years or so.

Quote
So if initial distribution in mining matters.  It matters more now in early adoption when the release schedule is trying to drive adoption than it does in 3 years

That depends on the future value, which is impossible to know. Bitcoin rewards were cut in half, yet the value of a block (and of all mining) now is vastly higher than it was 2+ years ago.

In fact another way to look at the schedule of mining rewards would be to attach a current value at the time they are mined. By that measurement Bitcoin is much less than 60% mined or whatever the current number is assuming constant-value BTC.

I am worried if the transaction fee is not high enough in 4 years time, will miner still serve the network?

No, unless the price skyrockets.
Also high fees makes people avoid transacting with xmr.

So we need a slow emission of coins for many  years. In the mean time, we find usage for the coin and build a strong community. Hopefully, when the emission is low, there will be enough transactions to sustain the network.
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