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Showing 6 of 6 results by Ueshiba
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Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Where do Bitcoins Came from?
by
Ueshiba
on 13/02/2016, 00:24:58 UTC
Out of curiosity I just thought where do bitcoins came from??

Are you at all curious where the US Dollar comes from?

Quote
Person A deposits $100 in a bank, which means he has $100 he can spend. In accordance with Federal Reserve regulations, the bank is allowed to loan up to 90% of this money to someone else, say, Person B.

Once Person B has $90 in his bank account, this makes a total of $190 available to be spent. But his bank can loan up to $81 (90% of $90) to someone else. Now a total of $271 is available to be spent. And so on.

Source
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: bitcoin facebook page?
by
Ueshiba
on 12/02/2016, 02:12:18 UTC
A fb page would not get a lot of traction, as bitcoin users don't like to advertise the fact that they are.
Post
Topic
Board Mining
Re: The Evolution of Mining *from princeton bitcoin textbook*
by
Ueshiba
on 11/02/2016, 19:20:43 UTC
Great to see such a pre-eminent organisation releasing papers, and in draft, for free.

Not having yet read the paper, but commenting purely on the picture:
The similarity isn't accurate: An individual of moderate means can still afford to contribute meaningfully at the ASIC level for BITmining, unlike gold mining.
Basic infrastructure for an ASIC can cost about $1k with a moderate-low ROI, but still some ROI, unlike Gold mining at the pit mining level. Even 1 truck, or digger is so unfathomably beyond reach of the average joe it is just ridiculous.

The scales just do not compare.

Crash

Information age vs industrial age.
The cost of computing power dropped so much in a few decades -- we can buy a $5 computer, or get it for free with a purchase of one magazine issue.

(However, technically, a person can still get lucky gold panning.)
Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: What do the banks want out of the Bitcoin blockchain?
by
Ueshiba
on 09/02/2016, 02:24:39 UTC
An aspect of the blockchain technology that is of great interest to the financial industry is smart contracts.

One example: Insurance clam adjudication with a large volume of transactions (i.e. prescription fulfillment). Boy-oh-boy wouldn't that be a disruptor of the current business model.

Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: How big is a bitcoin?
by
Ueshiba
on 06/02/2016, 03:01:07 UTC
I found this Khan Academy series an excellent overview of blockchain for beginners:

Link to Videos
Post
Topic
Board Mining (Altcoins)
Re: mining hardware is it profitable????
by
Ueshiba
on 06/02/2016, 00:33:57 UTC
What about buying used ASICs from local classifieds sites?
There maybe good values once in a while.
"Buyer Beware" of course.