Ya know, it seems pretty easy to mine this shit.
We should start a Bitcoin pool.
We should start a Bitcoin pool.
BrobyDDark said
Ya know, it seems pretty easy to mine this shit.We should start a Bitcoin pool.
mdk said
http://www.wired.com/wiredenterprise/2013/12/casascius/
CidTheKid said
Bitcoin is not a bad idea, it just happens to not be very well thought out. The same way thieves who brag about their ill-gotten swag on facebook don't think things through.There's a limit to how many Bitcoins there can possibly be, and the closer the number of bitcoins gets to the limit, the harder it is "Mine" more of them. Mining, by the way, is how you get more Bitcoins, and it involves solving a computationally difficult mathematical problem. Each Bitcoin is a unique solution to the problem, and there is a finite amount of them, which is where the limit on Bitcoins comes from. The more Bitcoins out there, the lower the chance of finding a unique solution, and hence, you require more power to find Bitcoins.So, because there can only be so many Bitcoins in the market, it's value goes up over time, which encourages hoarding over spending them. Its not regulated by any government, so it's value can jump and down wildly, resting on the whims of international governments, ironically enough. I wouldn't recommend investing in it.Which brings us to dogecoin. dogecoin is basically the same thing as Bitcoin, except it's newer, so buying into it doesn't seem like such a bad idea. However, the fact that it's the 6th most valuable cryptocurrency out there should give you an idea as to just how awful cryptocurrencies are.
When President Abraham Lincoln assumed office he understood the importance of money for the war effort. With this in mind Lincoln appointed Salmon P. Chase as Secretary of the Treasury. As Secretary, Chase alone was authorized to act on all matters pertaining to the country’s finances. Chase, like almost everyone at the time, underestimated the duration and cost of the war.[2] Within a few months it was clear that the costs of the war would run far beyond the government's limited income from tariffs and excises.
The Lincoln Administration sought loans from major banks, mostly in New York City. These banks quickly ran out of money to lend and, in turn, went to European banks for more. The European banks demanded very high interest rates of 24 to 36 percent. Lincoln refused to borrow on such terms and called for other solutions.[3]
The amount of Demand Notes issued was far insufficient to meet the war expenses of the government, but even so was not supportable.
The solution came from Colonel "Dick" Taylor, an Illinois businessman serving as a volunteer officer. Taylor met with Lincoln in January 1862, and suggested issuing unbacked paper money. Taylor said "Just get Congress to pass a bill authorizing the printing of full legal tender treasury notes... and pay your soldiers with them and go ahead and win your war with them also. If you make them full legal tender... they will have the full sanction of the government and be just as good as any money; as Congress is given the express right by the Constitution."[3]
Issuing unbacked paper money was not an idea Lincoln really liked, but soon there was mounting pressure in Congress to do something. The government could either print its own money or go into deep perpetual debt to foreign creditors. So the President was quick to endorse Taylor's proposal.[4] On February 25, 1862, Congress passed the first Legal Tender Act, which authorized the issuance of $150 million in United States Notes.[5]
The Notes were printed with green ink, but on only one side. Despite this difference, they were called "greenbacks" by the public, being considered equivalent to the Demand Notes already known as such. These Note were issued by the United States to pay for labor and goods.[3][6]
As the government issued hundreds of millions in greenbacks, the value of the greenback against gold declined. But though the decline was substantial, it was nothing like the collapse of the Continental dollar.
In 1862, the greenback declined against gold until by December gold was at a 29% premium. By spring of 1863 the greenback declined further, to 152 against 100 dollars in gold. However, after the Union victory at Gettysburg the geenback recovered to 131 dollars to 100 in gold. In 1864 it declined again as Grant was making little progress against Lee who held strong in Richmond throughout most of the war. The Greenback's low point came in July of that year: 258 greenbacks equal to 100 gold. When the war ended in April 1865 the greenback made another remarkable recovery to 150.[7]
BrobyDDark said
Dogecoin can fuck itself. If a Meme is being engrained into the society so bad that it gets a currency, then it needs to die.
Azarthes said
Seeing a topic related to cryptocurrencies makes me think less of the community as a whole. Seriously this thread can fuck itself
Halo said
I saw a statistic somewhere or other claiming that $17 million is spent daily in electricity bills in order to mine $4 million worth of Bitcoins, because of the ridiculous amount of computing power needed to crack the algorithms at this point. Not sure about the accuracy of the data, but it's food for thought.
BrobyDDArk said Dogecoin can fuck itself. If a Meme is being engrained into the society so bad that it gets a currency, then it needs to die.
Awson said
I was actually going to say that when I saw that this thread was bumped."Doesn't it cost as much or even more in electricity to mine bitcoin than they are worth?"
Awson said
I was actually going to say that when I saw that this thread was bumped."Doesn't it cost as much or even more in electricity to mine bitcoin than they are worth?"
So it's only valuable because people decide it is and choose to go along with the notion that it has value
Halo said
I saw a statistic somewhere or other claiming that $17 million is spent daily in electricity bills in order to mine $4 million worth of Bitcoins, because of the ridiculous amount of computing power needed to crack the algorithms at this point. Not sure about the accuracy of the data, but it's food for thought.
Blitzkrieg said
RPGcoin anyone?
Blitzkrieg said
RPGcoin anyone?