Think we break back below 50k?
Think we get a mega-nuke capitulation candleChrundle the Great said:
Think we break back below 50k?
Chrundle the Great said:
Think we break back below 50k?
I'm staking with RockTheBlockchain right now. Downside is that the validator won't be picked, or you need to sell quick but are locked inI should be studying 11 said:
Has anyone staked their Harmony One? I've moved the tokens to the Harmony One Wallet on mainnet and am interested in staking with a validator, but I'm not sure how to pick one? Low fees, high uptime, high expected return... what am I missing?
BQ2001 said:I'm staking with RockTheBlockchain right now. Downside is that the validator won't be picked, or you need to sell quick but are locked inI should be studying 11 said:
Has anyone staked their Harmony One? I've moved the tokens to the Harmony One Wallet on mainnet and am interested in staking with a validator, but I'm not sure how to pick one? Low fees, high uptime, high expected return... what am I missing?
ac04 said:bitcoinSidetrackAg said:
What low cost coins are y'all looking to buy?
This is generally the right answer. I've recently made a decision to consolidate into BTC and no more than 10 coins with promising use cases that I can also stake.ac04 said:bitcoinSidetrackAg said:
What low cost coins are y'all looking to buy?
Decay said:
Storj got put onto coinbase and it looks like a less-cpu (and therefore hopefully less-power) intensive coin to host your own node. I have a spare 2TB HDD so i'm going to see if running a node on my PC makes sense.
That might be a nice way to supplement trading gains.
Meanwhile Filecoin has been humming. 4x since Jan.
Quote:
On March 10th 2021, Bitcoin completed 287 thousand transactions, with an average effective finality time of 42 minutes and $5 million spent in bitcoin fees on that day alone.
On March 10th 2021, Ethereum completed 1.3 million transactions, with an average effective finality time of 4 minutes and $20 million spent in Ethereum fees on that day alone.
On March 10th 2021, Litecoin completed 110 thousand transactions, with an average effective finality time of 29 minutes and just $3,750 spent on Litecoin fees on that day.
On March 10th 2021, Nano completed 2 million transactions, with an average effective finality time of 0.26 seconds and ZERO spent on fees on that day.
I don't think bitcoin will be replaced as a "store of value". First mover advantage is too great. But if you believe in crypto as "digital currency", then nano is easily my pick.Quote:
The Nano mainnet was spammed due to its feeless nature, for a week at the start of March. More transactions were completed on the Nano network over than week than bitcoin has seen over the entire year of 2021. Total fees? Zero. Average finality time? A fraction of a second.
Quad Dog said:
Newbie with a longer term question. I was reading that there were a lot of altcoins coming out and available. Usually it's a bad thing when something gets popular and a lot of options flood the market. It was bad for comic books, bad for baseball cards, and to a degree it's bad for real money now with the fed printing money. Is this different?
Or is it the point? To get in early and bet on coins you think will have longevity and sell the ones you think will be worthless in 5-10 years to dummies like me?
NTXAg10 said:
Assuming you already buy into the concept that decentralized financial networks are good and should be the future... most folks a look at alts similarly to betting on which small or micro cap is going to be the next Amazon, Google, visa, etc.
NFTs are the only product I might say is somewhat similar to your baseball card/comic book example.
wareagle044 said:NTXAg10 said:
Assuming you already buy into the concept that decentralized financial networks are good and should be the future... most folks a look at alts similarly to betting on which small or micro cap is going to be the next Amazon, Google, visa, etc.
NFTs are the only product I might say is somewhat similar to your baseball card/comic book example.
Yep and even then if you buy the right ones - you're sitting on gold. You've got to really study the use cases of the alt-coins and understand what their purpose will eventually be and how it fits into the future of DeFi
SidetrackAg said:wareagle044 said:NTXAg10 said:
Assuming you already buy into the concept that decentralized financial networks are good and should be the future... most folks a look at alts similarly to betting on which small or micro cap is going to be the next Amazon, Google, visa, etc.
NFTs are the only product I might say is somewhat similar to your baseball card/comic book example.
Yep and even then if you buy the right ones - you're sitting on gold. You've got to really study the use cases of the alt-coins and understand what their purpose will eventually be and how it fits into the future of DeFi
What do you think of XLM, ADA, and ANKR?