This post is pretty obtuse, and contradictory. Cash is moved digitally millions of times a day.bmks270 said:
Digital assets are transferable accross the internet. You need a physical location to swap cash. For example, ransomeware attackers wouldn't really be effective if they didn't have digital currency, they'd get caught at the point of cash exchange since they'd have to physically make a trade.
It's why criminals were the first to adopt digital currency.
This isn't unique to Bitcoin.
The ledger and know your customer is making Bitcoin less useful for crime. But shady exchanges overseas don't care if criminals are using their exchange to convert to government back currencies.
Hamas for example uses Bitcoin a lot. I'm sure Iran, China, Russia, and probably even NATO are using cryptos and shady exchanges to finance activity they want kept secret.
Algorithmic Epiphany said:
New All Time High, 75% of bitcoin New ATHs results in a doubling in price in 18 days or less.
Who wants to gamble against ~$140k bitcoin in 18 days?
Quote:
Collectible to asset/store of value to medium of exchange to unit of account.
Quote:
EdgeCloud for Mobile unleashing AI computing on 3.9 billion Android devices
Theta EdgeCloud and the 10,000+ active Edge Nodes around the world are the backbone that allows Theta to deliver fast, cost-effective compute work for AI and video applications over a decentralized network. As the Theta engineering team continues its core development of EdgeCloud for its first release on May 1, a separate and parallel R&D track is under way to launch a pilot of the Theta Edge Node for mobile Android devices in the next few months.
The goal of this initial pilot is to test the feasibility of leveraging up to 3.9 Billion active Google Android devices for certain types of AI computation workloads. Android today accounts for 70% of the mobile operating system market share across 190 countries, and provides an ideal platform to evaluate mobile CPU/GPU capabilities.
This also sets up the opportunity to target over 150 million active Android TVs globally that run the AndroidTV operating system from Sony, Sharp, Phillips and many more brands. While the average daily consumption of television today is around 3 hours, this leaves the device available the majority of the time for other types of computation and data sharing, especially as these always connected Smart TVs increase CPU and GPU capabilities over the next decade.
https://thetalabs.medium.com/edgecloud-for-mobile-unleashing-ai-computing-on-3-9-billion-android-devices-7f07f02637f9
TexasRebel said:
theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/03/crypto-bitcoin-market-strength/677643/
p-townag said:TexasRebel said:
theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2024/03/crypto-bitcoin-market-strength/677643/
The utility is very very simple. Asset immune to inflation that can be transferred between parties without trusting the other person and without having to ask permission of a company or government.
p-townag said:
I'm not sure what you're asking, but if you'll clarify I'm happy to answer
TexasRebel said:
The fixed supply a list item that makes it fail.
Some inflation is necessary for a healthy economy. (Not hyperinflation). Otherwise there is no spending. No work. No money.
You also have no way to replace the lost. Due to carelessness, malice, corruption… it's just gone. If you have the only p-towncoin, why would anyone else want "it"?
TexasRebel said:p-townag said:
I'm not sure what you're asking, but if you'll clarify I'm happy to answer
Northeast Blackout for 4 days.
Quote:
Onlyifwhen every single satoshi, or fraction of a satoshi is lost, would(sic) any of that matter.
TexasRebel said:
Why would anyone ever spend "money" that will be worth more tomorrow?
There are always other methods to use to fulfill needs. Don't buy a sandwich with your 401k.
p-townag said:TexasRebel said:p-townag said:
I'm not sure what you're asking, but if you'll clarify I'm happy to answer
Northeast Blackout for 4 days.
If I still have a cell phone, I buy things with Bitcoin with other people's and business's cell phones. The same thought experiment is true as we transition away from paper dollars. Some of us have enough paper currency to transact, but a great number of people only have their credit cards and Apple Pay. It's not a very different situation than what would happen in the traditional system. And, again, we're still a very long way from Bitcoin being the dominant medium of exchange, so we'll have to innovate to decide what should happen in blackouts. We'll have dollars around for a very long time.
I think of Bitcoin as my savings account and dollars as my checking account.
TexasRebel said:Quote:
Onlyifwhen every single satoshi, or fraction of a satoshi is lost, would(sic) any of that matter.
p-townag said:TexasRebel said:
Why would anyone ever spend "money" that will be worth more tomorrow?
There are always other methods to use to fulfill needs. Don't buy a sandwich with your 401k.
Because they know that what they have left will continue to increase in value. What they earn at their job will continue to increase in value. It also creates incentive for saving and not blowing money on useless stuff. If I'm going to part with my Bitcoin, it better be worth it. I'm not going to buy worthless junk.