Delete thread ban user. Obvious ponzi is obvious.
Quote:
Not only has the value of the platform's ether tokens jumped by about 900% since the start of the year, but the public blockchain has recently attracted attention from banks and tech behemoths. And while ethereum supporters have long argued that the global computing platform would help to form a new kind of internet, a wave of innovators are now trying to deliver on that ideal.
The problem is that there might be downsides to this increase in price and increase in attention. Namely, as the price increases, ethereum apps grow more expensive to use.
That's because on ethereum, users need to pay directly for the computational power they use, whether to place a bid on a prediction market or use new kinds of decentralized Twitters and Ubers. For now, this is a different picture than, say, Facebook, the popularity of which rests in part on its 'free' platform.
GarlandAg2012 said:
At what point will this board recognize that this isn't just a ponzi scheme? $54 B market cap is significant and the Enterprise Ethereum Alliance is comprised of real, name brand companies.
http://entethalliance.org/
I don't necessarily think it will replace fiat currency in my lifetime but there is a huge amount of value in blockchain technology and coins are the easiest way to get in on it.
Source: https://ethereum.stackexchange.com/questions/253/the-ether-denominations-are-called-finney-szabo-and-wei-what-who-are-these-naQuote:
'wei': '1',
'kwei': '1000',
'ada': '1000',
'femtoether': '1000',
'mwei': '1000000',
'babbage': '1000000',
'picoether': '1000000',
'gwei': '1000000000',
'shannon': '1000000000',
'nanoether': '1000000000',
'nano': '1000000000',
'szabo': '1000000000000',
'microether': '1000000000000',
'micro': '1000000000000',
'finney': '1000000000000000',
'milliether': '1000000000000000',
'milli': '1000000000000000',
'ether': '1000000000000000000',
'kether': '1000000000000000000000',
'grand': '1000000000000000000000',
'einstein': '1000000000000000000000',
'mether': '1000000000000000000000000',
'gether': '1000000000000000000000000000',
'tether': '1000000000000000000000000000000'
wheelskjm said:jh0400 said:Quote:
Not only has the value of the platform's ether tokens jumped by about 900% since the start of the year, but the public blockchain has recently attracted attention from banks and tech behemoths. And while ethereum supporters have long argued that the global computing platform would help to form a new kind of internet, a wave of innovators are now trying to deliver on that ideal.
The problem is that there might be downsides to this increase in price and increase in attention. Namely, as the price increases, ethereum apps grow more expensive to use.
That's because on ethereum, users need to pay directly for the computational power they use, whether to place a bid on a prediction market or use new kinds of decentralized Twitters and Ubers. For now, this is a different picture than, say, Facebook, the popularity of which rests in part on its 'free' platform.
http://www.coindesk.com/ethereums-double-edged-sword-will-rising-price-hurt-users/
The idea that the more people use a platform, the more expensive it is to use is won't work if there is the expectation of enterprise-scale adoption of the platform. I understand that this should incent people to write more efficient code, but if all of the gains that are made in writing better code are offset by continually higher processing costs then this will never be anything other than a cool idea for anarcho-capitalist bloggers to write about. Current IaaS/PaaS providers (AWS, Azure, GCE, etc) are getting cheaper by the month, and I can't see us moving to a more expensive option just because it's "cool".
Just because we trade 1 bitcoin or 1 ether right now doesn't mean we won't be trading .00000001 bitcoin or .00000001 ether in the future. That's what most of you aren't grasping. Not only that, but like you can have an intranet for your corporation that works like the internet, but internally, so may you build an internal blockchain that runs your special platform or API or smart contracts within your organization... which could work independent of bitcoin/public blockchains, or in a symbiotic or tethered aspect to other blockchains.
Central banks just declared they have no interest in competing on different platforms and want one platform for their infrastructure. That means there could be a winner take all for that business. It doesn't mean that one will end all others.
It's too easy now to create competition. Trust in the global market environment is growing. There's going to be some epic fails, but everything is progressing positively.
Physical transportation is the next major disruption. Between space travel and hyperloop/ET3 proposals, the world is going to get ever smaller, and easier to trade. Hopefully we use AI to decentralize power and information rather than otherwise.
Teach your kids to code. It's invaluable for their future.
wheelskjm said:jh0400 said:Quote:
Not only has the value of the platform's ether tokens jumped by about 900% since the start of the year, but the public blockchain has recently attracted attention from banks and tech behemoths. And while ethereum supporters have long argued that the global computing platform would help to form a new kind of internet, a wave of innovators are now trying to deliver on that ideal.
The problem is that there might be downsides to this increase in price and increase in attention. Namely, as the price increases, ethereum apps grow more expensive to use.
That's because on ethereum, users need to pay directly for the computational power they use, whether to place a bid on a prediction market or use new kinds of decentralized Twitters and Ubers. For now, this is a different picture than, say, Facebook, the popularity of which rests in part on its 'free' platform.
http://www.coindesk.com/ethereums-double-edged-sword-will-rising-price-hurt-users/
The idea that the more people use a platform, the more expensive it is to use is won't work if there is the expectation of enterprise-scale adoption of the platform. I understand that this should incent people to write more efficient code, but if all of the gains that are made in writing better code are offset by continually higher processing costs then this will never be anything other than a cool idea for anarcho-capitalist bloggers to write about. Current IaaS/PaaS providers (AWS, Azure, GCE, etc) are getting cheaper by the month, and I can't see us moving to a more expensive option just because it's "cool".
Just because we trade 1 bitcoin or 1 ether right now doesn't mean we won't be trading .00000001 bitcoin or .00000001 ether in the future. That's what most of you aren't grasping. Not only that, but like you can have an intranet for your corporation that works like the internet, but internally, so may you build an internal blockchain that runs your special platform or API or smart contracts within your organization... which could work independent of bitcoin/public blockchains, or in a symbiotic or tethered aspect to other blockchains.
Central banks just declared they have no interest in competing on different platforms and want one platform for their infrastructure. That means there could be a winner take all for that business. It doesn't mean that one will end all others.
It's too easy now to create competition. Trust in the global market environment is growing. There's going to be some epic fails, but everything is progressing positively.
Physical transportation is the next major disruption. Between space travel and hyperloop/ET3 proposals, the world is going to get ever smaller, and easier to trade. Hopefully we use AI to decentralize power and information rather than otherwise.
Teach your kids to code. It's invaluable for their future.
Quote:
If you get into it, start small, learn how to own your money in hard wallets like trezor or ledger nano, exchanges are high risk/reward and some have been around the entire time...