I already get it. That's why i don't buy bitcoin. That's the point.Monywolf said:
You will get it eventually. Until then, don't buy it.
aTmAg said:
Everything is in limited supply. Just because something is in limited supply doesn't mean it has value. There are more bitcoin than Theranos products ever produced. That doesn't mean buying either is a good idea.
Adverse Event said:aTmAg said:
Everything is in limited supply. Just because something is in limited supply doesn't mean it has value. There are more bitcoin than Theranos products ever produced. That doesn't mean buying either is a good idea.
Prove it. Prove right now the supply limit of whatever you're claiming. How many things can you confirm the supply at any given moment with 100% accuracy?
So you think that for me to "prove" the claim "there is a finite number of humans on Earth" that I have to specify exactly how many humans there are on Earth? Really?Adverse Event said:aTmAg said:
Everything is in limited supply. Just because something is in limited supply doesn't mean it has value. There are more bitcoin than Theranos products ever produced. That doesn't mean buying either is a good idea.
Prove it. Prove right now the supply limit of whatever you're claiming. How many things can you confirm the supply at any given moment with 100% accuracy?
aTmAg said:That's like saying, "I don't know how to talk to people who have been aware of flat earth for a decade and still don't grasp it." Bitcoin is not a complicated concept to grasp. Especially for a software engineer who used to specialize in cryptography. People like me don't disagree because we don't "grasp it" we disagree because we do grasp it.Adverse Event said:
I don't really know how to talk to people who've been aware of bitcoin for a decade and still don't grasp it. I'm still trying, which says a lot. I admire Sisyphus, at least he doesn't have an option.
Don't be like those conspiracy theorists who refuse to consider that perhaps they may actually be wrong.
Monywolf said:
There are those who own bitcoin, and those who will. But at a higher price.
Being a software engineer doesn't mean you also know economics. Just look at 90% of the staff at Google.LatinAggie1997 said:aTmAg said:That's like saying, "I don't know how to talk to people who have been aware of flat earth for a decade and still don't grasp it." Bitcoin is not a complicated concept to grasp. Especially for a software engineer who used to specialize in cryptography. People like me don't disagree because we don't "grasp it" we disagree because we do grasp it.Adverse Event said:
I don't really know how to talk to people who've been aware of bitcoin for a decade and still don't grasp it. I'm still trying, which says a lot. I admire Sisyphus, at least he doesn't have an option.
Don't be like those conspiracy theorists who refuse to consider that perhaps they may actually be wrong.
Ok, so in terms of Michael Saylor's opinion and breakdown of Bitcoin, how does your differ??
You being a software engineer and he being a software engineer.
This is nonsense. You really think Apple knows the number of Android phones in the market at any given time? Hell no. The beauty of the free market and the price system is that nobody has to know any of that crap to evaluate supply and demand.Adverse Event said:
In essence, when supply is not transparent or auditable, decision-making becomes more complex and often relies on a combination of indirect indicators, historical data, trust, and risk management strategies.
I'm probably in a very small minority of people that hold degrees in both Economics and Computer Science. But that's about as far as I interject in these kind of discussions.aTmAg said:
Being a software engineer doesn't mean you also know economics. Just look at 90% of the staff at Google.
While being a SW engineer better enables one to understand the algorithm, that doesn't mean one understands the economics of why bitcoin fails as a currency.
Well, to be frank, the field of economics is so wide open that even that may not be enough. Unlike real sciences like Physics, where modern PhD's basically agree on 99% of their field and only disagree on the bleeding edges, economic PhDs disagree on 90% of their field. Look no farther than the Nobel Prize winners like Milton Friedman and Paul Krugman for a good example. I basically consider Keynesianism to be the alchemy of economics, so to me even that wouldn't count.RockOn said:I'm probably in a very small minority of people that hold degrees in both Economics and Computer Science. But that's about as far as I interject in these kind of discussions.aTmAg said:
Being a software engineer doesn't mean you also know economics. Just look at 90% of the staff at Google.
While being a SW engineer better enables one to understand the algorithm, that doesn't mean one understands the economics of why bitcoin fails as a currency.
That's the dollar.birdman said:
A bunch of typing to describe a non-productive asset.
Maybe that's one of the ones my good friend lost. He talks about it often but I just don't really understand the conversation. I'll stick with what I do best.one safe place said:
I found a bitcoin in the parking lot last week, guess someone didn't know they dropped it.
Not the smart ones.Monywolf said:That's the dollar.birdman said:
A bunch of typing to describe a non-productive asset.
And that's why many more companies will have bitcoin as part of their treasury holdings very soon.
aTmAg said:Not the smart ones.Monywolf said:That's the dollar.birdman said:
A bunch of typing to describe a non-productive asset.
And that's why many more companies will have bitcoin as part of their treasury holdings very soon.
JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs and George Soros all caught in lies spreading #Bitcoin and cryptocurrency FUD.
— The ₿itcoin Therapist (@TheBTCTherapist) November 6, 2023
The whole time they were capitalizing on the negative price action. 🤯
Watch what they do, NOT what they say!pic.twitter.com/pQykqDzgaN
Berkshire has over $300 billion in holdings. They obviously have indirect exposure to Bitcoin, along with every other thing on the planet.Adverse Event said:aTmAg said:Not the smart ones.Monywolf said:That's the dollar.birdman said:
A bunch of typing to describe a non-productive asset.
And that's why many more companies will have bitcoin as part of their treasury holdings very soon.
Even Berkshire Hathaway's holdings are exposed to bitcoin, you know ol Rat poison?
Which of the smart companies are gonna be the strongest holdouts?
birdman said:
When you have to keep lying to pimp your product, you aren't fooling anyone.
Nubank has small percentage in crypto. BH invested in a growing bank that has 99% typical holdings.
Quote:
Nubank, the largest Brazilian digital bank by market value, is adding the option for customers to buy and sell bitcoin (BTC) and ether (ETH) on its platform, the company announced Wednesday.
Nu Holdings, Nubank's parent company, also said it is allocating roughly 1% of the cash on its balance sheet to bitcoin to show its belief in the cryptocurrency
Until now, Nubank allowed users to invest in crypto only through exchange-traded funds available through its investment unit, NuInvest, according to the company's website.
"There is no doubt that crypto is a growing trend in Latin America, one that we have been following closely and believe will have a transformational impact on the region. Yet the trading experience is still very niche as customers either lack information to feel confident to enter this new market or just get frustrated by complex experiences," Nubank CEO and co-founder David Vlez said in a statement.
IndeedAdverse Event said:birdman said:
When you have to keep lying to pimp your product, you aren't fooling anyone.
Nubank has small percentage in crypto. BH invested in a growing bank that has 99% typical holdings.Quote:
Nubank, the largest Brazilian digital bank by market value, is adding the option for customers to buy and sell bitcoin (BTC) and ether (ETH) on its platform, the company announced Wednesday.
Nu Holdings, Nubank's parent company, also said it is allocating roughly 1% of the cash on its balance sheet to bitcoin to show its belief in the cryptocurrency
Until now, Nubank allowed users to invest in crypto only through exchange-traded funds available through its investment unit, NuInvest, according to the company's website.
"There is no doubt that crypto is a growing trend in Latin America, one that we have been following closely and believe will have a transformational impact on the region. Yet the trading experience is still very niche as customers either lack information to feel confident to enter this new market or just get frustrated by complex experiences," Nubank CEO and co-founder David Vlez said in a statement.
Sounds very typical, having minimum of 1% of business treasury in the hardest asset, Bitcoin.
Every time a swindler comes along, we add another blueprint to our library. The bitcoin world is like an AI, training to better discern ally from attacker. Next step is to build tech, practices, and institutions that make the ecosystem more immune from these fraud attacks. pic.twitter.com/uTa8kFnqwk
— Tuur Demeester (@TuurDemeester) November 7, 2023
#BTC pic.twitter.com/8PQ3Y8J6WO
— naiive (@naiivememe) November 7, 2023
One bear market, two perspectives.
— Tyler Campbell (@clockwork_prior) November 7, 2023
Don’t get fooled into attending bitcoin’s next funeral. pic.twitter.com/5rHZ1Hy0Jz
@NFLPlayerProps said:
Seems like a software engineer should understand what a breakthrough it was to finally solve the Byzantine Generals' Problem.
Bitcoin blows minds for many reasons.
— Jameson Lopp (@lopp) November 8, 2023
Computer scientists say Satoshi solving the Byzantine Generals problem blew their minds.
Economists might be mystified by an asset that goes up in price without producers increasing production to increase supply.
Oil drillers say finding…
Adverse Event said:@NFLPlayerProps said:
Seems like a software engineer should understand what a breakthrough it was to finally solve the Byzantine Generals' Problem.Bitcoin blows minds for many reasons.
— Jameson Lopp (@lopp) November 8, 2023
Computer scientists say Satoshi solving the Byzantine Generals problem blew their minds.
Economists might be mystified by an asset that goes up in price without producers increasing production to increase supply.
Oil drillers say finding…
If your mind isn't blown in some capacity because of bitcoin, I'd question its existence.
He plays a software engineer on tv.