btctrader22 (OP)
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December 16, 2014, 10:17:04 AM |
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An excellent article about where the digital economy is going. If bitcoin ever stands a chance to succeed, it needs to carve itself a niche in that shitstorm coming from emerging markets. If it fails to do that, it'll be irrelevant in two years. http://www.slideshare.net/yiibu/the-emerging-global-web
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NeuroticFish
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December 16, 2014, 10:33:43 AM |
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Bitcoin is already a success (just the price doesn't really reflect that) and bitcoin already is there on quite a lot of emerging markets.
What bitcoin needs (especially for its price) is to increase the awareness everywhere on earth, because even if it's there, not many actually know about it, what it is and what can it do.
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peonminer
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December 16, 2014, 10:35:31 AM |
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said the random kid with 35 posts and a donation address
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btctrader22 (OP)
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December 16, 2014, 10:46:26 AM |
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Bitcoin is already a success (just the price doesn't really reflect that) and bitcoin already is there on quite a lot of emerging markets.
I would like to politely disagree. Bitcoin is currently a success in the same way Linux is/was a success: in a very tiny niche (geeks, sysadmins, tech-savvy folks, etc ...). Unfortunately, Linux never came out of that niche. It's still in there 15+ years later In the same way, Bitcoin has most certainly not reached the mainstream, and especially not in emerging markets where most people only have old "feature" phones and close to nil in terms of technical skills. To do so would require a order of magnitude improvement in ease of use, speed of confirming transactions and number of transactions per second the network can handle. This is a giant missed opportunity: the next 4 billion people who are going to come online are from emerging markets, and bitcoin is simply to hard/too slow for them to use as compared to the alternatives outlined in that presentation (especially towards the end). What bitcoin needs (especially for its price) is to increase the awareness everywhere on earth, because even if it's there, not many actually know about it, what it is and what can it do.
What bitcoin needs is to become *way* simpler, and *way* faster. And it also needs a client on older phones (non-smartphone). If it does this, awareness will just be a byproduct.
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btctrader22 (OP)
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December 16, 2014, 10:48:28 AM |
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said the random kid with 35 posts and a donation address
Says the bozo who registered in 2013 and thinks that makes him an old-timer.
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peonminer
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December 16, 2014, 11:06:00 AM |
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said the random kid with 35 posts and a donation address
Says the bozo who registered in 2013 and thinks that makes him an old-timer. Never said that, just not keen to take btc advice from a n00b
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xDan
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December 16, 2014, 11:18:49 AM |
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Bitcoin needs killer apps, things that are only now possible due to Bitcoin. Open Bazaar might be one. ChangeTip type things another. So, news like this is what excites me: http://siliconangle.com/blog/2014/11/21/bitcoin-tipping-sees-giant-growth-changetip-exceeds-10000-tips-in-one-day/And from the presentation in OP, half of these "emerging markets" are using standard websites like instagram, facebook... They don't need special tools, they use the same things us in the "developed" world use. Competing with the PayPals (or Chinese equivalent) is not really useful. Those apps are good! Instead you need to go where they cannot go. And with Bitcoin any kid can make the next big financial or money using app. It's just a matter of time.
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HODLing for the longest time. Skippin fast right around the moon. On a rocketship straight to mars. Up, up and away with my beautiful, my beautiful Bitcoin~
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NeuroticFish
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December 16, 2014, 11:22:07 AM |
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Bitcoin is already a success (just the price doesn't really reflect that) and bitcoin already is there on quite a lot of emerging markets.
I would like to politely disagree. I guess that we have a different perception of what success means. As technology, it is proven to work, it is copied by a lot of other coins and it starts to be known (or heard of) by the masses. Bitcoin is currently a success in the same way Linux is/was a success: in a very tiny niche (geeks, sysadmins, tech-savvy folks, etc ...). Unfortunately, Linux never came out of that niche. It's still in there 15+ years later In the same way, Bitcoin has most certainly not reached the mainstream, and especially not in emerging markets where most people only have old "feature" phones and close to nil in terms of technical skills. To do so would require a order of magnitude improvement in ease of use, speed of confirming transactions and number of transactions per second the network can handle. This is a giant missed opportunity: the next 4 billion people who are going to come online are from emerging markets, and bitcoin is simply to hard/too slow for them to use as compared to the alternatives outlined in that presentation (especially towards the end). What bitcoin needs (especially for its price) is to increase the awareness everywhere on earth, because even if it's there, not many actually know about it, what it is and what can it do.
What bitcoin needs is to become *way* simpler, and *way* faster. And it also needs a client on older phones (non-smartphone). If it does this, awareness will just be a byproduct. These are only steps to gain awareness, imo. Bitcoin will not go faster. If you want "faster", find another coin (DOGE?). Don't get me wrong, I would like to see a solution to speed it up, but I don't think there's any. Making it work with non-smartphones sounds strange to me. Would you like that the bank pays for a product from your credit card money just from a phonecall from your number without checking anything? I guess not. Bitcoin is not just money. It's SAFE/SECURE money. And the software to use bitcoin has to comply, else it will be a loss on the long time. However, if you think otherwise, start a business that handles bitcoin only from something as simple as a phonecall, maybe I'm wrong and you'll have success. And fyi: emerging countries have cheaper phones with more features than yours, just may not have well-known brand names, that's all
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Soros Shorts
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December 16, 2014, 11:22:57 AM |
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Bitcoin is currently a success in the same way Linux is/was a success: in a very tiny niche (geeks, sysadmins, tech-savvy folks, etc ...). Unfortunately, Linux never came out of that niche. It's still in there 15+ years later
I am not a Linux fan, but when I see an Android phone or a MacBook Pro running OS X I see Linux powered devices. Those are hardly niche products.
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wadili89
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December 16, 2014, 11:34:19 AM |
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Bitcoin is a success. Its widely used, almost anything you can now buy with Bitcoin. Adoption is increasing and it will keep getting easier to use Bitcoin as a payment method.
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jeffersonian2012
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December 16, 2014, 11:51:26 AM |
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Goldsilver.com just began accepting bitcoin today. There is a demand for bitcoin and merchants are listening. Bitcoin is obviously successful. Just look around
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LiteCoinGuy
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In Satoshi I Trust
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December 16, 2014, 12:00:09 PM |
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Bitcoin is currently a success in the same way Linux is/was a success: in a very tiny niche (geeks, sysadmins, tech-savvy folks, etc ...). Unfortunately, Linux never came out of that niche. It's still in there 15+ years later
I am not a Linux fan, but when I see an Android phone or a MacBook Pro running OS X I see Linux powered devices. Those are hardly niche products. just wanted to write that too. @btctrader22 good analyse
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btctrader22 (OP)
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December 16, 2014, 12:15:17 PM Last edit: December 16, 2014, 01:23:55 PM by btctrader22 |
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said the random kid with 35 posts and a donation address
Says the bozo who registered in 2013 and thinks that makes him an old-timer. Never said that, just not keen to take btc advice from a n00b I'd get into the habit of taking a look at the time someone registered their account before calling them a noob. I bought my coins at $5. I guess that makes me a noob compared to some. But perhaps not compared to others.
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btctrader22 (OP)
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December 16, 2014, 12:27:22 PM |
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Bitcoin needs killer apps, things that are only now possible due to Bitcoin. Open Bazaar might be one. ChangeTip type things another.
Wholeheartedly agreed. A good example of that is being able to pay in places where traditional payment methods create a privacy concern. For example in some european country, being able to pay via NFC as your board a train (swipe and go) was abandoned because it was deemed illegal - would allow to track who goes where fine grained. Had they used bitcoin, problem solved. *BUT*, and that's exactly the point I'm trying to make, unless we go and compete head to head with the easier payment methods out there, such as the chinese equivalents of paypals and paypal itself (who's sorely in need of stiff competition to start offering better services), we are never going to leave that niche where only bitcoin can live. And the problem is : that niche is *small*. This is cool indeed. And from the presentation in OP, half of these "emerging markets" are using standard websites like instagram, facebook... They don't need special tools, they use the same things us in the "developed" world use.
Competing with the PayPals (or Chinese equivalent) is not really useful. Those apps are good! Instead you need to go where they cannot go.
And with Bitcoin any kid can make the next big financial or money using app. It's just a matter of time.
This is where I disagree with you. The one thing that Facebook should have taught anyone working in the digital economy, it's that once something has mushroomed to getting more than 90% of the market, they damn near undisplaceable (even if they're not a particularly brilliant product - fb never was). I'm worried that by the time this bitcoin killer app comes about, it will face an enormous barrier to entry. Whereas if bitcoin tries to move to the emerging market space first, its natural advantages will make it a damn sure winner.
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Plutonium
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December 16, 2014, 12:34:08 PM |
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said the random kid with 35 posts and a donation address
Quality over quantity, am I right??
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btctrader22 (OP)
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December 16, 2014, 12:36:34 PM |
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These are only steps to gain awareness, imo.
Bitcoin will not go faster. If you want "faster", find another coin (DOGE?). Don't get me wrong, I would like to see a solution to speed it up, but I don't think there's any.
No, by faster, I don't mean some lame-ass altcoin where the only "innovation" they created was changing 5 characters in the source code to change the block production rate. Something like a rock-solid implementation of side-chains or off-chain transactions is what I'm thinking about. Making it work with non-smartphones sounds strange to me. Would you like that the bank pays for a product from your credit card money just from a phonecall from your number without checking anything?
I guess not. Bitcoin is not just money. It's SAFE/SECURE money. And the software to use bitcoin has to comply, else it will be a loss on the long time. However, if you think otherwise, start a business that handles bitcoin only from something as simple as a phonecall, maybe I'm wrong and you'll have success.
I am not talking about watering down bitcoin's security. Non-smartphone are called feature phones. They're used by more than half of the people on the planet. They look like this: http://mobilerji.files.wordpress.com/2010/02/cell-pile.jpgThey have a CPU, and one can code tiny apps for them. Building a simple lightweight bitcoin client is possible. The *demand* for a simple mobile payment solution on feature phone is huge. See here if you don't believe me : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-PesaAnd fyi: emerging countries have cheaper phones with more features than yours, just may not have well-known brand names, that's all China and India may. Africa certainly does not.
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btctrader22 (OP)
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December 16, 2014, 12:41:12 PM Last edit: December 16, 2014, 12:55:25 PM by btctrader22 |
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Bitcoin is currently a success in the same way Linux is/was a success: in a very tiny niche (geeks, sysadmins, tech-savvy folks, etc ...). Unfortunately, Linux never came out of that niche. It's still in there 15+ years later
I am not a Linux fan, but when I see an Android phone or a MacBook Pro running OS X I see Linux powered devices. Those are hardly niche products. https://i.imgur.com/rAP3rHm.pnghttps://i.imgur.com/eaE0tVD.pngFair enough about Android. Not so about OSX which is built on top of BSD In both cases, much of the original spirit of Linux (openness & freedom) has been watered down to the extreme. I'm not sure I'd be happy if making bitcoin successful meant curtailing its key attribute to the extent android and OSX have ravaged the original attributes of Linux and BSD. On an Android phone, half of the things you can do with a desktop are impossible unless you root your phone. The phone isn't really yours anymore.
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btctrader22 (OP)
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December 16, 2014, 12:45:03 PM Last edit: December 16, 2014, 01:06:29 PM by btctrader22 |
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Bitcoin is a success. Its widely used, almost anything you can now buy with Bitcoin. Adoption is increasing and it will keep getting easier to use Bitcoin as a payment method.
I am with you in the wishful thinking department. I truly want to see bitcoin succeed. But I'm sorry you have to be realistic: what you say is simply not true. Buying a house or a car, or getting paid by your employer, or paying your taxes with BTC is simply not possible in 2014 in 99.99% of the cases.
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btctrader22 (OP)
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December 16, 2014, 12:52:46 PM |
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Goldsilver.com just began accepting bitcoin today. There is a demand for bitcoin and merchants are listening. Bitcoin is obviously successful. Just look around
Just like someone else said above, it depends on your definition of successful. Adoption is growing yes. But is it growing fast enough ? This is not your grandma's world anymore, this is the age of internet : anything that's not growing exponentially has a strong likelihood to die out. Also, yes, I do look around. I note that I still can't go buy my coffee at startbucks with btc. That I can't pay my taxes with BTC. That if I try to pay someone in my friend & families with BTC, they look at me like I'm some kind of weirdo. And I'm saying, the whole point of the OP in fact, that if we don't get our asses in gear, BTC will get the living daylight beaten out of it by simpler, faster (yes potentially weaker and less safe solutions - but then who cares about that shit when you buy a cup of coffee ?) coming from the fastest growing parts of the internet: China, Brazil, Indonesia, India, Africa
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