Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies

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Slayerx
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Slayerx » Fri Jan 12, 2018 6:43 pm

Has anyone had any success with ICO's?

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No:1 Final Fantasy Fan
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by No:1 Final Fantasy Fan » Sun Jan 14, 2018 1:48 pm

Hmm don't really understand ICOs yet.

Anyone going to invest in some Binance coins BNB? With the exchange doing so well I heard BNB is going to go up

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That
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by That » Sun Jan 14, 2018 2:08 pm

Hope you guys are investing your life savings in Garlicoin. It's going to be a really stable and viable currency.

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Errkal
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Errkal » Sun Jan 14, 2018 2:11 pm

Karl wrote:Hope you guys are investing your life savings in Garlicoin. It's going to be a really stable and viable currency.

Naa something stinks about it man.

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Moggy
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Moggy » Sun Jan 14, 2018 2:15 pm

Karl wrote:Hope you guys are investing your life savings in Garlicoin. It's going to be a really stable and viable currency.


I’m putting all of my money into tulip bulbs.

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No:1 Final Fantasy Fan
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by No:1 Final Fantasy Fan » Sun Jan 14, 2018 2:46 pm

Moggy wrote:
Karl wrote:Hope you guys are investing your life savings in Garlicoin. It's going to be a really stable and viable currency.


I’m putting all of my money into tulip bulbs.

lol read about that in the Tulip museum in Amsterdam.

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Ironhide
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Ironhide » Sun Jan 14, 2018 8:17 pm

I don't actually get how bitcoin mining works, where does the monetary value come from? is it some kind of micro-investment algorithm that just slowly builds up money over time or something more sinister like the plot of Office Space whereby the mining program essentially steals minute amounts of cash from millions of sources?

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No:1 Final Fantasy Fan
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by No:1 Final Fantasy Fan » Sun Jan 14, 2018 9:04 pm

Ironhide wrote:I don't actually get how bitcoin mining works, where does the monetary value come from? is it some kind of micro-investment algorithm that just slowly builds up money over time or something more sinister like the plot of Office Space whereby the mining program essentially steals minute amounts of cash from millions of sources?

This is how I think it works. Mining is basically completing transactions for people and transactions earn you money because fees are paid. So when I buy coins I pay a fee which goes towards the miners for performing the transaction.

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satriales
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by satriales » Sun Jan 14, 2018 9:54 pm

Ironhide wrote:I don't actually get how bitcoin mining works, where does the monetary value come from? is it some kind of micro-investment algorithm that just slowly builds up money over time or something more sinister like the plot of Office Space whereby the mining program essentially steals minute amounts of cash from millions of sources?

Mining in simple terms is your computer running calculations and occasionally earning a reward. Those rewards have no monetary value other than what other people are willing to pay for them.

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Ironhide
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Ironhide » Sun Jan 14, 2018 10:33 pm

satriales wrote:
Ironhide wrote:I don't actually get how bitcoin mining works, where does the monetary value come from? is it some kind of micro-investment algorithm that just slowly builds up money over time or something more sinister like the plot of Office Space whereby the mining program essentially steals minute amounts of cash from millions of sources?

Mining in simple terms is your computer running calculations and occasionally earning a reward. Those rewards have no monetary value other than what other people are willing to pay for them.


I wonder what those calculations are for, I'd be fairly happy if it was something like protein folding or something else scientifically beneficial but less so if it's working on North Koreas nuclear weapons program or SKYNET/GENYSYS :slol:

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Rightey
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Rightey » Mon Jan 15, 2018 5:18 am

Ironhide wrote:
satriales wrote:
Ironhide wrote:I don't actually get how bitcoin mining works, where does the monetary value come from? is it some kind of micro-investment algorithm that just slowly builds up money over time or something more sinister like the plot of Office Space whereby the mining program essentially steals minute amounts of cash from millions of sources?

Mining in simple terms is your computer running calculations and occasionally earning a reward. Those rewards have no monetary value other than what other people are willing to pay for them.


I wonder what those calculations are for, I'd be fairly happy if it was something like protein folding or something else scientifically beneficial but less so if it's working on North Koreas nuclear weapons program or SKYNET/GENYSYS :slol:


For Bitcoin the calculations are just verification's of transactions. Essentially you have a ton of people verifying each transaction and movement of the coins (or fractions of coins) from one wallet into another to make a system that is (supposedly) tamper proof.

For Etherium, you can actually put out contracts to get people to do your calculations, and you pay them in Etherium tokens. So in theory I guess North Korea could use it to do whatever they needed.

Pelloki on ghosts wrote:Just start masturbating furiously. That'll make them go away.

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Errkal
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Errkal » Mon Jan 15, 2018 6:29 am

Not sure if anyone will be interested but that faucet I posted for Bitcoin now has a dogecoin version.

http://freedoge.co.in/?r=1529790

Disclaimer: that link is my referral link, if you don't want to use the referral bit just remove the ?r=.... bit

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Rightey
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Rightey » Mon Jan 15, 2018 7:27 am

Errkal wrote:Not sure if anyone will be interested but that faucet I posted for Bitcoin now has a dogecoin version.

http://freedoge.co.in/?r=1529790

Disclaimer: that link is my referral link, if you don't want to use the referral bit just remove the ?r=.... bit


That video explaining what Doge is :lol:


Pelloki on ghosts wrote:Just start masturbating furiously. That'll make them go away.

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Errkal
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Errkal » Mon Jan 15, 2018 7:33 am

:lol:

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Rightey
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Rightey » Tue Jan 16, 2018 12:11 am

I decided to try mining to see what it's like, it was fairly easy to set up a (Monero) XMR miner. Since around noon, I've made about 30 cents, or 0.0006012423 XMR 8-)

I'm guessing if you want to be serious with this crap you really need to optimize your equipment. I spoke to someone else who is doing the same using their gaming PC, their hash rate is about 1.5K/sec, and they told me in a month they mined 0.6XMR, or about $300. My hash rate is 600/s, (I'm using a 1060) but still $150/month wouldn't be too bad. The only thing is I imagine by the time I convert from XMR to who knows what, to bitcoin, to actual money I'll probably be left with about 10 cents because of all the damn fees. :x

Pelloki on ghosts wrote:Just start masturbating furiously. That'll make them go away.

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Errkal
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Errkal » Tue Jan 16, 2018 7:20 am

Rightey wrote:I decided to try mining to see what it's like, it was fairly easy to set up a (Monero) XMR miner. Since around noon, I've made about 30 cents, or 0.0006012423 XMR 8-)

I'm guessing if you want to be serious with this crap you really need to optimize your equipment. I spoke to someone else who is doing the same using their gaming PC, their hash rate is about 1.5K/sec, and they told me in a month they mined 0.6XMR, or about $300. My hash rate is 600/s, (I'm using a 1060) but still $150/month wouldn't be too bad. The only thing is I imagine by the time I convert from XMR to who knows what, to bitcoin, to actual money I'll probably be left with about 10 cents because of all the damn fees. :x


And a nice electric bill.

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Hulohot
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Hulohot » Tue Jan 16, 2018 12:40 pm

What a bloodbath! My portfolio has lost $2000 in value these past few days.

Luckily it doesn't bother me much because I got in to hold and it's easy for me to just hold, watch and buy.

Feel sorry for those panicking right now after investing more than they could afford.

A good day to buy more.

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Rocsteady
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Rocsteady » Tue Jan 16, 2018 1:11 pm

Thought this was a good, negative, take on Bitcoin:


https://www.theguardian.com/technology/ ... _clipboard

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That's not a growth
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by That's not a growth » Tue Jan 16, 2018 2:55 pm

Rocksleddy wrote:Thought this was a good, negative, take on Bitcoin:


https://www.theguardian.com/technology/ ... _clipboard

I enjoyed that a lot, but then it does echo my feelings about cryptocurrencies. Feels at best a bubble, at worst a Ponzi scheme. Be interesting to see how government legislation changes in the not too distant future, and what effect it has on cryptocurrencies as a whole. It will happen, it's just a matter of when, and to what extent.

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Preezy
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PostRe: Bitcoins and Other Crypto-currencies
by Preezy » Tue Jan 16, 2018 2:58 pm

Anyone tried talking to people that are obsessed with Bitcoin? It's like talking to a militant Scientologist or a vegan, very cult-like. My sister started preaching about it at Christmas (she's a New York-living vegan and vocal activist about everything) and everyone started rolling their eyes in a "here she goes again" style. Absolutely refused to accept any of the criticisms leveled at it and professed about how it's going to smash the central bank system and set the world on a new path, just like that Zeitgeist documentary about scrapping all money blah blah blah. Bore off.

I suspect she's spent some money on Bitcoin and wants to validate her decision :slol:


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