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Showing 20 of 343 results by gbeirn
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Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 31/01/2014, 17:13:17 UTC
Are the block base targets extremely high or do I have a problem with all my VPSs?
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Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 23/01/2014, 21:23:21 UTC
iPhone app - iNxt RELEASED

New version with bug fix already sent to Apple!



For now functions are:

-It takes the price to DGEX
-Charts from nextcoin.pw
-Check the balance of an account
-Check transaction
-Alias<>account



If you want tu suggest new function i will be happy to add it!

i have not get any bounty or donation, if you appreciate my work please donate: 4894174904569783391


AppStore link:https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/inxt/id802351888?l=it&ls=1&mt=8

Can't download it from Austria

Also says it isn't available in the U.S.

Edit: Had to update my iTunes, its working now
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 23/01/2014, 21:05:45 UTC
One last screen shot before I upgrade:

Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 23/01/2014, 20:40:56 UTC
For those that want to take time off from reading this big ass thread. Here are two handy links:

J-L posts: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=46556;sa=showPosts
C-F-B posts: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?action=profile;u=166843;sa=showPosts

If anyone has an inspiration for an interesting NXT server/messaging/agents project and needs a developer, let me know by PM. I'll be in my code cave patiently awaiting 0.6.0 refactor and meditating on some novel ideas for NXT projects.

You have their names reversed.
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 23/01/2014, 14:44:24 UTC
Attention Devs, Senior members, and Stake holders,

 I have a proposal for Real World marketing purposes and have written an outline with costs here;

https://nextcoin.org/index.php/topic,3441.msg32673.html#msg32673

 Proposal brief:

 Informative postcards to be handed out at conventions and other crypto gatherings, with bullet point NXT features, an easy to follow URL containing more details, a walk through to install the latest NXT client with hash sum, and most importantly a secure, redeemable code to instantly obtain a "premium amount" of coins, ie 20NXT

 The marketing project will be open to all interested parties who wish to apply for and distribute cards at their event. Cards will be customized with date and location, and shipped at no cost to them.
 Sign up data will be saved and reported upon, analyzing interest per event, and promotion efforts.

 I am currently looking for partners to handle:
 Web and Database Programming
 European and Asian Translations
 European and Asian Distribution
 Funding

 Thanks and looking forward to your replies!

I will help with funding. I have received some donations for VPS hosting that more than cover that so I can give some back to help with this.
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 23/01/2014, 03:26:29 UTC
I was at 3800 something peers this time yesterday

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Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 23/01/2014, 03:25:39 UTC
wonder if Mark Cuban would ever be interested in NXT...

two of his tweets.

One from TODAY
https://twitter.com/mcuban/statuses/426084456202387456
"On the Matter of Why Bitcoin Matters"

and one from last November 22nd.
https://twitter.com/mcuban/statuses/403916745900978176

"I don't want to invest in bitcoin.  If virtual currency becomes acceptable I want to invest in the soon to be invented competitors"

would having him invest be bad or good lol?

Someone should tell him he is behind the curve

Edit: I am serious with that, some one who has twitter should tell him that.
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 23/01/2014, 03:20:06 UTC
I heard somebody said Next is going to be 30$ in 2 years, what do you guys think? for 1 year and 2 year?

I'd say it's possible. It's also possible that it's going to be $100. But there is no chance to predict such things. So it's nothing but speculations.

All we can do is make 1-2 month predictions based on info we got now. BCNext can probably see further, but he won't tell.

1NXT=1BTC we all know this Wink
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Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 23/01/2014, 03:10:54 UTC
Ha thanks.. but I was thinking formatted for those sheets you can use in your regular printer.

Here in the US, online business cards are so cheap, you can get 500 for around $20, full color both sides. Label paper a few more bucks and you have the ability to get 500 people signed up to NXT for pennies each, The most expensive part is the NXT themselves, but I would appeal to the community for faucet donations.





This is what I have access to: http://www.dymo.com/en-US/labelwriter-labels

I'm in the US too, midwest currently but born and raised in Jersey
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Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 23/01/2014, 03:01:05 UTC
Great minds think alike.

Like I said, I'm going to Inside BTC in NYC in April and would love to get a faucet fund set up for this by then.

It can be maintained by a third party, and maybe funded by the half million marketing fund run by Salsacz

Marketing Team could issue redemption codes, with a time code attached, so they start the week of the convention they are created for, even track the IPs and the issuer name. Even an expiration date if desired.

So in my case, I could get a numbered allotment, that would all be valid starting April 1/14, and would all track as being registered to my user name, and given out in NYC, and save the IPs and the block chain transactions so the marketing team could pull back data and see how many new users we can gain out of these conferences.

As well check back in a few weeks and see how many held, how many sold their free NXT and so on. Hugely interesting.

OK EDIT>> I'm interested in doing this whole project, Faucet, code issuing, and data tracking. I'm going to look into setting it up. Anyone interested in helping with building the backend?

thanks



Still thinking, Obviously the allotment of redemption codes would be outputted in a format for label printers, with the "issuers name, date of event, and the code"
You could just print out the 100 or so you were allotted and stick the labels on the back of 100 cards. So easy.

I have a label printer! Not sure how helpful that is, but if you get me the data I can print it and mail it to you
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 22/01/2014, 22:10:34 UTC
Two screenshots of what I've been busy with for my NXT Solaris client. To be released over the weekend, since I need a rest.

Market view



Personal account management showing NXT values in other currencies


Be careful with the market view, though. You know, it's closed source and I might have something in there that influences the markets in the direction I want...  Wink



Killer!

Any news on how to make this kind of open-source for trustfulness?

Define "kind of open source". :-)

It already is partial open source. Full open source is not going to happen.

My take on this: Define how much you are willing to risk based on the level of trust that you have for a software. Only enter account secrets for accounts that have assets that matches your level of trust and accepted risk, e.g. create small asset accounts with another software and only enter secrets for these small stake accounts in my software. You could still use the "view only" functionality for your big stake accounts in my client and of course all other functions that don't require you to enter a secret.

If we rise funds for this project, is any chance that it could be open source?

I'm sure the community is happy to pay you for this great work (I will personally add funds), but we will need this 100% open source.
Even if it is sexy is no point using it if I can find another client 100% open source.

I think the problem was (not sure if its this client or not) that the program used to write it could not be open sourced due to the libraries used. So without an entire re-write, it wouldn't be possible.
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 22/01/2014, 21:22:05 UTC
Nxt price now
dgex @9079
bter @8580
Interesting Smiley

so, arbitrage between the 2 is doable?

Sure I have considered it but the time it takes to move funds since everything is done manually usually causes it not to work out so well. I suppose if you had enough BTC and NXT at each you could do it.
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 22/01/2014, 19:06:26 UTC
btw here are our last papers about this, any comment would be fantastic, we still didn't make all maths

The cost to run the network mostly depends upon the amount of electricity it uses

I see the biggest cost to running the Bitcoin and Nextcoin networks to be the electricity used to power the network and hardware costs which have to be covered by transaction fees.  Currently Bitcoin solves that by printing money which disguises the transaction fees.  Eventually though that will stop and miners will need to be paid solely using transaction fees which will have to be big enough to cover the cost of the electricity used to power the network.  Either way, energy efficiency alone is something important to be considered.

Cost of the electricity to run the Bitcoin network per day

This article was written in May when the hash rate of the Bitcoin network was 100,000 GH/s and they calculate that it cost $7,500 per day to run the network.
http://cointext.com/electricity-usage-of-bitcoin-mining/

Let's assume those number are still the same, except ASICs have gotten more efficient and since we’re thinking long term, I’m going to use the most efficient miners out there as the reference. I’m using a Wattage per Gigahash of 5 Watts per GH for ASICs whereas the above article uses 10 Watts per GH.
Source: http://www.coindesk.com/asic-bitcoin-miner-arms-race-the-definitive-coindesk-roundup/

It doesn't look like this will be the case but let's assume the network stays at 17,000,000 GH/s, so 170x bigger and 1/2 the Watts per Gigahash.
https://blockchain.info/charts/hash-rate

So $7500 multiplied by 170 and divided by 2 is $637,500 per day to supply electricity to the network.

$637,500 worth of electricity per day to power the Bitcoin network.


Cost of the electricity to run the Nxt network per day

At any minute in time, only one PC, virtual private servers (VPS), or Raspberry Pi is required to confirm transactions for Nextcoin.

A Raspberry Pi could not run 2000 transactions per second and I'm not sure about your home computer either, but the eventual goal is not to have every person forging but rather people pointing their accounts towards forging pools to be run on high powered equipment, such as a VPS.

VISA runs their network off of 376 servers, therefore it is reasonable to assume that Nextcoin could get to the point where it can survive while running on same number of servers.
http://www.networkcomputing.com/next-generation-data-center/news/networking/inside-visas-data-center/240155691

As far as the cost a VPS can be gotten off of GoDaddy for $24 per month, even the cheapest server should be able to sustain the Nextcoin network, which means at most they are using $0.8 worth of electricity per day, of course that figure also includes the cost of equipment and some profit for GoDaddy as well, but let's go with $0.8 per day.
http://www.godaddy.com/hosting/vps-hosting.aspx

So, let's say we are running 376 VPSs, 376 multiplied by $0.80 is $301 worth of electricity per day to run the network.

Therefore I estimate it would take $301 per day to power the Nextcoin network and match Bitcoins capabilities.

Summary: Nxt versus Bitcoin electricity cost

So Bitcoin costs $637,500 per day in electricity to power the network, Nextcoin currently costs $301 per day.

Therefore, Nxt is currently approximately 2120x more energy efficient and therefore cost efficient than Bitcoin.

Reasons this number may be slightly off
  • The hash rate looks like it will continue to grow rapidly in the near future based on this chart: https://blockchain.info/charts/hash-rate
  • Approximately $200 million has been spent on Bitcoin hardware so far but this cost has not been factored into Bitcoin's cost.
  • Both Bitcoin miners and VPSs will continue to become cheaper and more cost efficient.  Given how new Bitcoin miners are, most likely they will become more efficient significantly faster than VPSs.  I would estimate that would be a factor of 10 in Bitcoins favor in the future.
  • The 51% attack problem for Bitcoin basically means that the only way to secure the network is to spend a lot of money on equipment however, so no matter how efficient they get, they will have to support more and more miners in order keep it expensive to attack the network.

Both of them need some work to achieve that number of transactions per second but that is why all my money is on Nextcoin.  

As well as some other advantages of Nxt
Nxt has instant transfer confirmation instead of having to wait for 10 minutes
Nxt solves Bitcoin's potential 51% attack problem
Nxt generate interest in the form of new Nxts just by owning them, making them a better investment




I've spent all day on this, tweaking numbers for accuracy. I'd be curious to hear your thoughts on my math and discuss it. Then I would like to clean it up, maybe better answer some of those things in the reason this number may be off section, and write up an article on the topic and try to spread it around.  I'll probably wait until at least one cleaner, easier to use client is up and running and maybe the decentralized exchange before publishing it so people have that one to go to.

funny, we calculated this 8 days ago and the numbers looked same:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=345619.msg4462508;topicseen#msg4462508
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=345619.msg4512273;topicseen#msg4512273
+ new:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=345619.msg4576031#msg4576031

But you should really use true Nxt numbers, why would we run Nxt on PCs, when we have public nodes, VPSs and Raspberry Pi?

I need a little advice: How can we calculate a daily cost of Nxt web?

Something like:
number of peers x watts of the average computer? and transfer kW in Dollars?

Do we know a number of forging computers?

I do a simple calculation for you as following:

Say 10, 000 nodes in the network for Nxt, as you know there are about 10,000 accounts.

Say each node is a Pi, say each pi consumes 10Watts, so total 100kW, it's 2400 kWh, which is just $600 a day with $0.25 per kWh.

Say each node is a server with 500 Watts, that's 50 times of the above calculation, so it is about $30,000 a day.

So I predict a total power consumption is in the range of $600 ~ $30,000 a day, and most probably below $10000.

Wow, that's the most efficient system in the crypto currency world.


Edit: go on a simple calculation of the price for Nxt. Presently a day's tx fee is ~ 5000 Nxt, if it should cover the power consumption, that is, $600/5000 ~ $30,000/5000, so the Nxt price in the range $0.12 ~ $6.

Yeah, my pricing for Nxt is $0.12 ~ $6.



But there are 300 nodes, not 10k:

http://peerexplorer.com/

Quote
donate(1), 22k(3), 22k.io(66), BEER(1), CentOS(2), FreeBSD(1), linux(6), NCC-1701-D(1), NCC-1864(1), nxt.now.im(12), nxt86(2), PC(121), PC BaiMang...(2), PC-2212(1), Raspberry(1), RaspNXT(1), Rpi(1), RPi Solari...(1), SPARC(1), strawberry(1), Unknown(43), VPS(17), xrp.pw/nxt(1):

(4+66+1+1+12+2+43+17+1)x20W = 3kW
+
(2+6+1+1+121+2+1+1+1+1+1+1+1)x5W = 0.7kW

= 4kW

24(hours)x4(kW)x0.15/kWh = 14 USD

A Raspberry Pi only uses 2W at most:  400ma @ 5V.  This has to come from a power supply that has some conversion efficiency of 50-80% or so.  Let's be conservative and say we're using a 50% efficient wall plug transformer.  Then each Raspberry is using 4W of wall power to generate the 2W it actually needs to run.  Say electricity is $0.15 per kWh.  Then in a year of 365*24 = 8760 hours, a single Raspberry Pi is going to use 8760 * 4 = 35,040 watt-hours or 35 kWh per year costing 35 * 0.15 = $5.25 of electricity per year.  

Thus the power to run a Pi is thus real but pretty negligible in the overall cost picture.  You can run 25 Pis nonstop for a solid year for the same amount of juice required to leave a 100W incandescent bulb on day and night for a year.

As a reasonable estimate, a single Pi costs around $120 as capital outlay to set it up for a year of service as an NXT node:  $35 for the Pi itself; $30 more for the memory card, cables, cluster support gear, etc; $ 5 for a year's worth of power; and say $50 per year (around $2 / mo) to park it in a server farm.  A network of 300 Pis thus costs $36,00 to set up and run for a year (of which $15,000 per year or $1250 per month is "office rental" and "human tech support" and "internet bandwidth").  

If there are truly 5000 NXT per day generated in transaction fees as assumed above, that's 365*5000 = 1,825,000 NXT per year.  If you are using 300 Pis at $36,000 per year to capture ALL those transaction fees, you are spending $36,000 / 1,825,000 NXT = $0.02 per NXT or around 2 pennies per NXT to capture the NXT using Raspberry Pis.  At 0.00005 BTC/NXT and $800/BCT, a NXT is currently worth $0.04 cents.  

Rough ballpark estimate: Capturing NXT with Raspberry Pis could double your money in a year at current NXT prices.  The Raspberry cost is fixed; the ROI gets better and better the higher and higher NXT goes.

http://coen.boisestate.edu/ece/files/2013/05/Creating.a.Raspberry.Pi-Based.Beowulf.Cluster_v2.pdf

I seem to recall that people are setting up VPSs for around $20 per month or $240 per year, which is double the cost of setting up a Raspberry Pi for a year as outlined above.  Thus while NXT is at its current $0.04 each, capturing NXT with VPSs is a break-even proposition.

These are actually great numbers.  The return-on-investment or ROI for forging NXT is positive NOW and will be even more profitable when NXT coins become more valuable.  Thus even with NXT as a Proof-of-Stake coin without mining, there is STILL financial motivation for people to run the nodes required to keep the NXT system going.  For a pre-mined coin, that is a remarkable statement.

Oh and the daily cost of the NXT support web running on 300 Raspberry Pi nodes is $36,000 / 365 = $98.63 per day.  Do it on 300 VPSs instead, and the daily NXT support web cost is around $200 per day.



There should be a marketing video whit an instruction video with the things you need to buy and what the return on investment is . Or change the giveaway or faucet and only do a giveaway to people who run nxt on rasberry pi or odroid . Motivate new nxters to run nxt !



A Raspberry Pi only uses 2W at most:  400ma @ 5V.  This has to come from a power supply that has some conversion efficiency of 50-80% or so.  Let's be conservative and say we're using a 50% efficient wall plug transformer.  Then each Raspberry is using 4W of wall power to generate the 2W it actually needs to run.  Say electricity is $0.15 per kWh.  Then in a year of 365*24 = 8760 hours, a single Raspberry Pi is going to use 8760 * 4 = 35,040 watt-hours or 35 kWh per year costing 35 * 0.15 = $5.25 of electricity per year.  

Thus the power to run a Pi is thus real but pretty negligible in the overall cost picture.  You can run 25 Pis nonstop for a solid year for the same amount of juice required to leave a 100W incandescent bulb on day and night for a year.

As a reasonable estimate, a single Pi costs around $120 as capital outlay to set it up for a year of service as an NXT node:  $35 for the Pi itself; $30 more for the memory card, cables, cluster support gear, etc; $ 5 for a year's worth of power; and say $50 per year (around $4 / mo) to park it in a server farm.  A network of 300 Pis thus costs $36,00 to set up and run for a year (of which $15,000 per year or $1250 per month is "office rental" and "human tech support" and "internet bandwidth").  

If there are truly 5000 NXT per day generated in transaction fees as assumed above, that's 365*5000 = 1,825,000 NXT per year.  If you are using 300 Pis at $36,000 per year to capture ALL those transaction fees, you are spending $36,000 / 1,825,000 NXT = $0.02 per NXT or around 2 pennies per NXT to capture the NXT using Raspberry Pis.  At 0.00005 BTC/NXT and $800/BCT, a NXT is currently worth $0.04 or 4 pennies each.  

Rough ballpark estimate: Capturing NXT with Raspberry Pis could double your money in a year at current NXT prices.  The Raspberry cost is fixed; the return-on-investment ROI gets better and better the higher and higher NXT goes.

http://coen.boisestate.edu/ece/files/2013/05/Creating.a.Raspberry.Pi-Based.Beowulf.Cluster_v2.pdf

I seem to recall that people are setting up VPSs for around $20 per month or $240 per year, which is double the cost of setting up a Raspberry Pi for a year as outlined above.  Thus while NXT is at its current $0.04 each, capturing NXT with VPSs is a break-even proposition.

These are actually great numbers.  The return-on-investment or ROI for forging NXT is positive NOW and will be even more profitable when NXT coins become more valuable.  Thus even with NXT as a Proof-of-Stake coin without mining, there is STILL financial motivation for people to run the nodes required to keep the NXT system going.  For a pre-mined coin, that is a remarkable statement.

Oh and the daily cost of the NXT support web running on 300 Raspberry Pi nodes is $36,000 / 365 = $98.63 per day, call it $100 per day.  Do it on 300 VPSs instead, and the daily NXT support web cost is around $200 per day.



I have been adding some text to the NXT whitepaper at the wiki and my angle for the section I'm writing is Bitcoin Problem / NXT Solution.  Here's some interesting text I've researched, which considering my earlier Raspberry Pi calculations above, convinces me that Bitcoin is a dinosaur with a meteor in the sky coming in, while NXT is a cute furry mammal waiting patiently in its burrow for its time on the world stage:


PoW's Negative Ecological Consequences

Confirming transactions for existing Bitcoins, and creating new Bitcoins to go into circulation, requires enormous background computing power that must operate continuously.  This computing power is provided by so-called "mining rigs" operated by "miners".  Bitcoin miners compete among themselves to add the next transaction block to the overall Bitcoin blockchain.  This is done by "hashing" - bundling all Bitcoin transactions occurring over the past ten minutes and trying to encrypt them into a block of data that also coincidentally has a certain number of consecutive zeros in it.  Most trial blocks generated by a miner's hashing effort don't have this target number of zeros, so they make a slight change and try again.  A billion attempts to find this "winning" block is called a "gigahash", with a mining rig being rated by how many gigahashes it can perform in a second, denoted by "GH/sec".   A winning miner who is first to generate the next needle-in-a-haystack, cryptographically-correct Bitcoin block receives a reward of 50 newly-mined Bitcoins - a reward worth, at the time of this writing, around $50,000.   This competition among miners, with its hefty reward, repeats itself over and over and over every ten minutes or so - by early 2014 generating rewards of over 7000 bitcoins per day worth around $7 million dollars per day.

With so much money at stake, miners have supported a blistering arms race in mining rig technology to better their odds of winning.  Originally Bitcoins were mined using the central processing unit (CPU) of a typical desktop computer.  Then the specialized graphics processing unit (GPU) chips in high-end video cards were used to increase speeds.   Field programmable gate array (FPGA) chips were pressed into service next, followed by mining rigs specialized application specific integrated circuits (ASIC) chips.  ASIC technology is the top of the line for Bitcoin miners, but the arms race continues with various generations of ASIC chips now coming into service.  The current generation of ASIC chips are the so-called 65nm units, based on the size of their microscopic transistors in nanometers.  These are due to be replaced by 28nm ASICs in early-2014 and 20nm units by mid-2014.   An example of an upcoming state-of-the-art mining rig would be a Butterfly Labs "Monarch" 28nm ASIC card, which is to provide 600GH/sec for an electricity consumption of 350 watts and a price of $2100.  On the horizon is a card from Hashblaster slated to have three 20nm ASIC chips providing 3300 GH/sec for 1800 watts of power consumption.  Most operational mining rigs will probably be upgraded to this standard of performance and efficiency by mid-2014.

The mining rig infrastructure currently in place to support ongoing Bitcoin operations is astounding.  Bitcoin ASICs are idiot savants - they are able to do only the Bitcoin block calculation and nothing more, but they can do that one calculation at supercomputer speeds.  In November 2013, Forbes magazine ran an article entitled, "Global Bitcoin Computing Power Now 256 Times Faster Than Top 500 Supercomputers, Combined!".  In mid January 2014, statistics maintained at blockchain.info showed that ongoing support of Bitcoin operations required a continuous hash rate of around 18 million GH/sec.  During an day of 86,400 seconds, this means around 1.5 trillion trial blocks were generated and rejected by Bitcoin miners looking for the magic 144 blocks that would net them $7 million.  Thus around 99.99999999 % of all Bitcoin computation go not to curing cancer by modeling DNA or searching for radio signals from E.T - instead, they are totally wasted computations.  

The power and cost involved in this wasteful background miner support of Bitcoin is enormous.  If all Bitcoin mining rigs had "Monarch" levels of capability as described above - which they will not, until they are upgraded - they would represent a pool of 30,000 machines costing over $63 million and consuming over 10 megawatts of continuous power while running up an electricity bill of over $3.5 million per day.  The real numbers are significantly higher for the current, less-efficient mining rig pool of machines actually supporting Bitcoin today.  And these numbers are currently headed upward in an exponential growth curve as Bitcoin marches from its current one transaction per second to its current maximum of seven transactions per second.


There are at least 4000 network nodes at this time.
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 22/01/2014, 18:23:52 UTC
hi , guys can anyone throw me the link with the asset exchange and the instructions , I also want to test it ...

wiki details all the asset exchangte APIs.  use server:port of holms.cloudapp.net:6874
You'll need to have someone send you some NXT though.  Im running kinda low here though.

Post an address I'll send you some

cool! thanks my acct on holms is 16155265664111966451

20K Sent
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 22/01/2014, 18:03:09 UTC
hi , guys can anyone throw me the link with the asset exchange and the instructions , I also want to test it ...

wiki details all the asset exchangte APIs.  use server:port of holms.cloudapp.net:6874
You'll need to have someone send you some NXT though.  Im running kinda low here though.

Post an address I'll send you some
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 22/01/2014, 18:02:33 UTC
hi , guys can anyone throw me the link with the asset exchange and the instructions , I also want to test it ...

wiki details all the asset exchangte APIs.  use server:port of holms.cloudapp.net:6874
You'll need to have someone send you some NXT though.  Im running kinda low here though.

if you have a few send please, or any one please send some test nxt (of does it need to be real ?)

18415399211942906077  


Sent 20K
Post
Topic
Board CPU/GPU Bitcoin mining hardware
Re: Scrypt ASIC / SHA-256 combo miners Pics details
by
gbeirn
on 22/01/2014, 16:32:11 UTC
Can you split these up? I wouldn't mind  buying a few, but 2.7 bitcoin is a little steep for me.

I could buy the others from you. I want the Lil Bit order and maybe a few more but I can't afford the whole Big Bit right now.
Post
Topic
Board CPU/GPU Bitcoin mining hardware
Re: Scrypt ASIC / SHA-256 combo miners Pics details
by
gbeirn
on 22/01/2014, 15:17:48 UTC
Yes I am interested in buying some as well. Please PM the paypal address and pricing. Thanks!
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 22/01/2014, 14:50:07 UTC
Providers releasing names is really bad precedent. The NXT lynch mob might want to take a few minutes to think about a solution with less unintended consequences like asking the provider to not launder the stolen NXT.

It might also be an opportunity for the provider to use his knowledge of the accused as leverage to encourage him/her to return the NXT. This would be a big PR win for all without eroding privacy.

I agree with this, very dangerous to know privacy can be given up on a whim, even if it was for someone who is malicious.
Post
Topic
Board Announcements (Altcoins)
Re: NXT :: descendant of Bitcoin - Updated Information
by
gbeirn
on 22/01/2014, 02:44:25 UTC
Just for old times sake, here is a block check:

46958      8797677203327163788      woensdag 22 januari 2014 1:27:55   
      
      3      1'043 + 3      384 B   
      
      2      9393619519750392302      204 %   




And I want to put in a claim for a possible NXT record:

My VPS has been up running NRS 5.7 for over 6 days straight. No reboot, no problems.
146 hours !

I've accumulated 2236 active peers, is this a record ? Can anyone beat it?



Last very important point;

Everyone who reads this, pat yourselves on the back.
NXT is going to be huge and it is all because of ............you.
To the awesome community of talented, dedicated and sometimes just plain weird and wonderful NXT'ers:

Nice work, guys, onwards and upwards !
   

I got you beat EvilDave: