+1 Bitcoins are like a religon, They always have there little bumps.
Satoshi will reveal himself as the second coming of Christ in 2012.
And satoshi pulls off his mask and it's THE REANIMATED CORPSE OF JOHN MAYNARD KEYNES OH GOD WE WERE SO FOOLISH NOOOOOOO
This will happen.
Amen fellow Bitcoiners!
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Re: Why IS the bitcoin limited to 21 million?
by
Desu
on 28/06/2011, 18:51:04 UTC
Well, at the current market rate of 17.0397 the full amount of bitcoin equals to :$357,833,700 If certain ideals are correct that they will be worth 1,000 then:21,000,000,000. That seems like a good number.
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Re: What percentage of bitcoins do you think are male owned?
by
Desu
on 27/06/2011, 00:41:52 UTC
75%~ I haven't seen many girls, but I know I've seen some.
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Re: Bitcent?
by
Desu
on 25/06/2011, 03:27:02 UTC
Satoshi=CIA lol Just kidding!
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Re: Square²Wear Slogan Contest (win 1.5 btc)
by
Desu
on 24/06/2011, 14:46:02 UTC
An New drop in Electronic currency stock, But a new Rise in Square²Wear!
Use my abovementioned steps to recover your old wallet.dat money, then send them to your new wallet.dat address. Just be sure you do not throw away any wallet.dat which may still have some Bitcoins in.
Wallet.dat basically contains "passwords" to your Bitcoin addresses. In the public log of blocks, there are transactions targeting your address, that's how you got your first BTCs. Your bitcoin client just needs to "rescan" the log to show you the Bitcoins you have at these addresses.
The information that you "own" some BTCs at some addresses is stored in all-people public accessible log of blocks. Your wallet has passwords which can "claim" that you own your addresses. That's why you can get BTC to an address without running bitcoin client at all, for example.
So:
1. keep somewhere your receiving address from current wallet.dat 2. backup current wallet.dat 3. restore old wallet.dat 4. run bitcoin -rescan 5. you will see your "old" BTCs, send them to address from step 1. 6. restore new wallet.dat 7. run bitcoin -rescan 8. you should see new BTCs you got from friend plus a transfer of old BTCs from old wallet 9. use the new wallet.dat only
Let me know if this worked for you ...
Sending a small tip your way, I don't have much But I hope It helps you. Thank you for the Great advice.
Can anyone explain why on the main forum for a new crypto-currency; a futuristic concept which should surely attract only those who have interest in and a good understanding of economics, mathematics, and computer security; that the most insightful and informative thread consists of 6 pages of naff jokes and images of cats?
First, save your new wallet, then replace it with the old one. Then run bitcoin client with -rescan option. It will process the blocks and check again for your transactions.
You can do this any time as long as you do not lost your wallet.dat(s).