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Showing 9 of 9 results by MrsMonyy
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Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: *THE TOP 20 MOST INFLUENTIAL FEMALES IN CRYPTO*
by
MrsMonyy
on 19/06/2022, 13:25:04 UTC
I don;t like Influencers, these woman's are in the business world.
I will writte later more about them.

Christine Laggard is in Crypto market, acctualy she has a son who is invested her money..
I think she is not supported Crypto just for media but in private she is supporting and investing a Crypto .... Cool
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Bitcoin is dead!
by
MrsMonyy
on 18/06/2022, 20:31:18 UTC
Yes, he is very low. You think is it time to buy??
Post
Topic
Board Mining
Re: How to Create a Pool?
by
MrsMonyy
on 18/06/2022, 17:59:32 UTC
What do you think about Liquidity Pool? Has anyone had experience with it? Cool
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: What's happening With Bitcoin?
by
MrsMonyy
on 18/06/2022, 16:58:57 UTC
I must say, I didn't expect Bitcoin to drop so low. I thought that it was becoming more stable, losing a lower percentage of its value than it used to before.
But no need for panic, I think everything will be ok If you know how to invest him on right wey.
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Merits 1 from 1 user
*THE TOP 20 MOST INFLUENTIAL FEMALES IN CRYPTO*
by
MrsMonyy
on 18/06/2022, 16:37:03 UTC
⭐ Merited by Ahli38 (1)
In 2022 Cointelegraph found out that the number of female crypto users grew by 200% on the majority of top crypto exchanges. To celebrate the massive surge of women into the cryptocurrency space, we wanted to recognize some of the fearless women who are leading the way. My list consists of CEO's, Founders, Reporters, Chair Women and more. Stand with me in celebrating these amazing women for their incredible contributions to the space.

Elizabeth Stark

Kathie Wood

Hester Peirce

Lyn Alden

Caitlin Long

Meltem Demirors

Galia Benatrzi

Kathleen Breitman

Katie Haun

Blythe Masters

Joyce Kim

Jinglan Wang

Arianna Simpson

Christine Laggard

Emilie Choi

Leah Wald

Kristin Smith

Linda Xie

Catherine Coley

Laura Shin

These women are very successful in Trading. They are started from 0 and they made a big and great profits! I will start to learning every day more and more.

In the next post I will write more about them.

So, my question is MY LOVELY LADIES ARE YOU READY TO MAKE A CHANGES AND PROFITS?
Post
Topic
Board Bounties (Altcoins)
Re: Happy Rise (HARI) Bounty Campaign l Budget 100000 HARI Token l 3 Weeks
by
MrsMonyy
on 18/06/2022, 14:06:54 UTC
Thanks, i will join in Telegram Smiley
Post
Topic
Board Goods
Bitcoin Begginer
by
MrsMonyy
on 18/06/2022, 13:38:26 UTC
 Smiley Hi Guys, what do u think about BTC and curently situation?
Post
Topic
Board Beginners & Help
Hi guys and traders :)
by
MrsMonyy
on 18/06/2022, 12:48:31 UTC
Can anyone give me some good advice on what questions I should be asking? Or where I should start with trading? Thank you Smiley))
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Bitcoin Core 23.0 Released
by
MrsMonyy
on 18/06/2022, 11:39:37 UTC
Bitcoin Core version 23.0 is now available from:

https://bitcoincore.org/bin/bitcoin-core-23.0/

Or through BitTorrent:

magnet:?xt=urn:btih:32bc317cce76b966a26bdb53d42f64d66d595954&dn=bitcoin-core-23.0&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Ftracker.openbittorrent.com%3A80&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Ftracker.opentrackr.org%3A1337%2Fannounce&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Ftracker.[Suspicious link removed]%3A6969%2Fannounce&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Ftracker.leechers-paradise.org%3A6969%2Fannounce&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Fexplodie.org%3A6969%2Fannounce&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Ftracker.torrent.eu.org%3A451%2Fannounce&tr=udp%3A%2F%2Ftracker.bitcoin.sprovoost.nl%3A6969

This release includes new features, various bug fixes and performance
improvements, as well as updated translations.

Please report bugs using the issue tracker at GitHub:

https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues

To receive security and update notifications, please subscribe to:

https://bitcoincore.org/en/list/announcements/join/

How to Upgrade

If you are running an older version, shut it down. Wait until it has completely
shut down (which might take a few minutes in some cases), then run the
installer (on Windows) or just copy over /Applications/Bitcoin-Qt (on Mac)
or bitcoind/bitcoin-qt (on Linux).

Upgrading directly from a version of Bitcoin Core that has reached its EOL is
possible, but it might take some time if the data directory needs to be migrated. Old
wallet versions of Bitcoin Core are generally supported.

Compatibility

Bitcoin Core is supported and extensively tested on operating systems
using the Linux kernel, macOS 10.15+, and Windows 7 and newer.  Bitcoin
Core should also work on most other Unix-like systems but is not as
frequently tested on them.  It is not recommended to use Bitcoin Core on
unsupported systems.

Notable changes

P2P and network changes
  • A bitcoind node will no longer rumour addresses to inbound peers by default.
    They will become eligible for address gossip after sending an ADDR, ADDRV2,
    or GETADDR message. (#21528)
  • Before this release, Bitcoin Core had a strong preference to try to connect only to peers that listen on port 8333. As a result of that, Bitcoin nodes listening on non-standard ports would likely not get any Bitcoin Core peers connecting to them. This preference has been removed. (#23542)
  • Full support has been added for the CJDNS network. See the new option -cjdnsreachable and doc/cjdns.md (#23077)

Fee estimation changes
  • Fee estimation now takes the feerate of replacement (RBF) transactions into
    account. (#22539)

Rescan startup parameter removed

The -rescan startup parameter has been removed. Wallets which require
rescanning due to corruption will still be rescanned on startup.
Otherwise, please use the rescanblockchain RPC to trigger a rescan. (#23123)

Tracepoints and Userspace, Statically Defined Tracing support

Bitcoin Core release binaries for Linux now include experimental tracepoints which
act as an interface for process-internal events. These can be used for review,
debugging, monitoring, and more. The tracepoint API is semi-stable. While the API
is tested, process internals might change between releases requiring changes to the
tracepoints. Information about the existing tracepoints can be found under
doc/tracing.md and
usage examples are provided in contrib/tracing/.

Updated RPCs
  • The validateaddress RPC now returns an error_locations array for invalid
    addresses, with the indices of invalid character locations in the address (if
    known). For example, this will attempt to locate up to two Bech32 errors, and
    return their locations if successful. Success and correctness are only guaranteed
    if fewer than two substitution errors have been made.
    The error message returned in the error field now also returns more specific
    errors when decoding fails. (#16807)
  • The -deprecatedrpc=addresses configuration option has been removed.  RPCs
    gettxout, getrawtransaction, decoderawtransaction, decodescript,
    gettransaction verbose=true and REST endpoints /rest/tx, /rest/getutxos,
    /rest/block no longer return the addresses and reqSigs fields, which
    were previously deprecated in 22.0. (#22650)
  • The getblock RPC command now supports verbosity level 3 containing transaction inputs'
    prevout information.  The existing /rest/block/ REST endpoint is modified to contain
    this information too. Every vin field will contain an additional prevout subfield
    describing the spent output. prevout contains the following keys:
    • generated - true if the spent coins was a coinbase.
    • height
    • value
    • scriptPubKey
  • The top-level fee fields fee, modifiedfee, ancestorfees and descendantfees
    returned by RPCs getmempoolentry,getrawmempool(verbose=true),
    getmempoolancestors(verbose=true) and getmempooldescendants(verbose=true)
    are deprecated and will be removed in the next major version (use
    -deprecated=fees if needed in this version). The same fee fields can be accessed
    through the fees object in the result. WARNING: deprecated
    fields ancestorfees and descendantfees are denominated in sats, whereas all
    fields in the fees object are denominated in BTC. (#22689)
  • Both createmultisig and addmultisigaddress now include a warnings
    field, which will show a warning if a non-legacy address type is requested
    when using uncompressed public keys. (#23113)

Changes to wallet related RPCs can be found in the Wallet section below.

New RPCs
  • Information on soft fork status has been moved from getblockchaininfo
    to the new getdeploymentinfo RPC which allows querying soft fork status at any
    block, rather than just at the chain tip. Inclusion of soft fork
    status in getblockchaininfo can currently be restored using the
    configuration -deprecatedrpc=softforks, but this will be removed in
    a future release. Note that in either case, the status field
    now reflects the status of the current block rather than the next
    block. (#23508)

Files
  • On startup, the list of banned hosts and networks (via setban RPC) in
    banlist.dat is ignored and only banlist.json is considered. Bitcoin Core
    version 22.x is the only version that can read banlist.dat and also write
    it to banlist.json. If banlist.json already exists, version 22.x will not
    try to translate the banlist.dat into json. After an upgrade, listbanned
    can be used to double check the parsed entries. (#22570)

Updated settings
  • In previous releases, the meaning of the command line option
    -persistmempool (without a value provided) incorrectly disabled mempool
    persistence.  -persistmempool is now treated like other boolean options to
    mean -persistmempool=1. Passing -persistmempool=0, -persistmempool=1
    and -nopersistmempool is unaffected. (#23061)
  • -maxuploadtarget now allows human readable byte units [k|K|m|M|g|G|t|T].
    E.g. -maxuploadtarget=500g. No whitespace, +- or fractions allowed.
    Default is M if no suffix provided. (#23249)
  • If -proxy= is given together with -noonion then the provided proxy will
    not be set as a proxy for reaching the Tor network. So it will not be
    possible to open manual connections to the Tor network for example with the
    addnode RPC. To mimic the old behavior use -proxy= together with
    -onlynet= listing all relevant networks except onion. (#22834)

Tools and Utilities
  • Update -getinfo to return data in a user-friendly format that also reduces vertical space. (#21832)
  • CLI -addrinfo now returns a single field for the number of onion addresses
    known to the node instead of separate torv2 and torv3 fields, as support
    for Tor V2 addresses was removed from Bitcoin Core in 22.0. (#22544)

Wallet
  • Descriptor wallets are now the default wallet type. Newly created wallets
    will use descriptors unless descriptors=false is set during createwallet, or
    the Descriptor wallet checkbox is unchecked in the GUI.

    Note that wallet RPC commands like importmulti and dumpprivkey cannot be
    used with descriptor wallets, so if your client code relies on these commands
    without specifying descriptors=false during wallet creation, you will need
    to update your code.
  • Newly created descriptor wallets will contain an automatically generated tr()
    descriptor which allows for creating single key Taproot receiving addresses.
  • upgradewallet will now automatically flush the keypool if upgrading
    from a non-HD wallet to an HD wallet, to immediately start using the
    newly-generated HD keys. (#23093)
  • a new RPC newkeypool has been added, which will flush (entirely
    clear and refill) the keypool. (#23093)
  • listunspent now includes ancestorcount, ancestorsize, and
    ancestorfees for each transaction output that is still in the mempool.
    (#12677)
  • lockunspent now optionally takes a third parameter, persistent, which
    causes the lock to be written persistently to the wallet database. This
    allows UTXOs to remain locked even after node restarts or crashes. (#23065)
  • receivedby RPCs now include coinbase transactions. Previously, the
    following wallet RPCs excluded coinbase transactions: getreceivedbyaddress,
    getreceivedbylabel, listreceivedbyaddress, listreceivedbylabel. This
    release changes this behaviour and returns results accounting for received
    coins from coinbase outputs. The previous behaviour can be restored using the
    configuration -deprecatedrpc=exclude_coinbase, but may be removed in a
    future release. (#14707)
  • A new option in the same receivedby RPCs, include_immature_coinbase
    (default=false), determines whether to account for immature coinbase
    transactions. Immature coinbase transactions are coinbase transactions that
    have 100 or fewer confirmations, and are not spendable. (#14707)

GUI changes
  • UTXOs which are locked via the GUI are now stored persistently in the
    wallet database, so are not lost on node shutdown or crash. (#23065)
  • The Bech32 checkbox has been replaced with a dropdown for all address types, including the new Bech32m (BIP-350) standard for Taproot enabled wallets.

Low-level changes

RPC
  • getblockchaininfo now returns a new time field, that provides the chain tip time. (#22407)

Tests
  • For the regtest network the activation heights of several softforks were
    set to block height 1. They can be changed by the runtime setting
    -testactivationheight=name@height. (#22818)

Credits

Thanks to everyone who directly contributed to this release:
  • 0xb10c
  • 0xree
  • Aaron Clauson
  • Adrian-Stefan Mares
  • agroce
  • aitorjs
  • Alex Groce
  • amadeuszpawlik
  • Amiti Uttarwar
  • Andrew Chow
  • Andrew Poelstra
  • Andrew Toth
  • anouar kappitou
  • Anthony Towns
  • Antoine Poinsot
  • Arnab Sen
  • Ben Woosley
  • benthecarman
  • Bitcoin Hodler
  • BitcoinTsunami
  • brianddk
  • Bruno Garcia
  • CallMeMisterOwl
  • Calvin Kim
  • Carl Dong
  • Cory Fields
  • Cuong V. Nguyen
  • Darius Parvin
  • Dhruv Mehta
  • Dimitri Deijs
  • Dimitris Apostolou
  • Dmitry Goncharov
  • Douglas Chimento
  • eugene
  • Fabian Jahr
  • fanquake
  • Florian Baumgartl
  • fyquah
  • Gleb Naumenko
  • glozow
  • Gregory Sanders
  • Heebs
  • Hennadii Stepanov
  • hg333
  • HiLivin
  • Igor Cota
  • Jadi
  • James O'Beirne
  • Jameson Lopp
  • Jarol Rodriguez
  • Jeremy Rand
  • Jeremy Rubin
  • Joan Karadimov
  • John Newbery
  • Jon Atack
  • João Barbosa
  • josibake
  • junderw
  • Karl-Johan Alm
  • katesalazar
  • Kennan Mell
  • Kiminuo
  • Kittywhiskers Van Gogh
  • Klement Tan
  • Kristaps Kaupe
  • Kuro
  • Larry Ruane
  • lsilva01
  • lucash-dev
  • Luke Dashjr
  • MarcoFalke
  • Martin Leitner-Ankerl
  • Martin Zumsande
  • Matt Corallo
  • Matt Whitlock
  • MeshCollider
  • Michael Dietz
  • Murch
  • naiza
  • Nathan Garabedian
  • Nelson Galdeman
  • NikhilBartwal
  • Niklas Gögge
  • node01
  • nthumann
  • Pasta
  • Patrick Kamin
  • Pavel Safronov
  • Pavol Rusnak
  • Perlover
  • Pieter Wuille
  • practicalswift
  • pradumnasaraf
  • pranabp-bit
  • Prateek Sancheti
  • Prayank
  • Rafael Sadowski
  • rajarshimaitra
  • randymcmillan
  • ritickgoenka
  • Rob Fielding
  • Rojar Smith
  • Russell Yanofsky
  • S3RK
  • Saibato
  • Samuel Dobson
  • sanket1729
  • seaona
  • Sebastian Falbesoner
  • sh15h4nk
  • Shashwat
  • Shorya
  • ShubhamPalriwala
  • Shubhankar Gambhir
  • Sjors Provoost
  • sogoagain
  • sstone
  • stratospher
  • Suriyaa Rocky Sundararuban
  • Taeik Lim
  • TheCharlatan
  • Tim Ruffing
  • Tobin Harding
  • Troy Giorshev
  • Tyler Chambers
  • Vasil Dimov
  • W. J. van der Laan
  • w0xlt
  • willcl-ark
  • William Casarin
  • zealsham
  • Zero-1729

As well as to everyone that helped with translations on
Transifex.
Did you try this?