Author

Topic: . (Read 1160 times)

newbie
Activity: 34
Merit: 0
.
August 11, 2013, 10:20:17 PM
#8
Thanks,. But now I have a problem of no connections i have port 18333 open. Any advise?
Nevermind fixed it.
Damn the testnet is slow, "check you code twice, wait once"
newbie
Activity: 29
Merit: 0
August 11, 2013, 10:12:53 PM
#6
I feel bad for asking but can someone send some testnet coins to: ms4ZVRmASRnrBdzoWTQpvnr4HVxfQppq9j. Or is there an testnet faucet?

http://tpfaucet.appspot.com/
http://testnet.mojocoin.com/

When I last used these faucets to get testnet coins, I noticed I had to wait a couple hours for them to arrive. Maybe a temporary issue. But if you try them and don't immediately receive coins, that's probably why.
member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
August 11, 2013, 10:12:20 PM
#5
No point using test, there are a lot of Alt coins that are worthless, might as well as someone to send you some
staff
Activity: 4284
Merit: 8808
August 11, 2013, 07:01:09 PM
#4
Almost all altcoins use forks of really old versions of Bitcoin with a mish-mash of (partial) exploit fix backports and are, as such, not all that similar to current versions of Bitcoin.
legendary
Activity: 1862
Merit: 1011
Reverse engineer from time to time
August 11, 2013, 10:22:11 AM
#3
Hello everyone, I just wanted to know if there is an alt coin that is identical(RPC calls, transactions, etc...) to Bitcoin that I can use specifically for testing various transaction systems?
Almost all coins with the exception of one or two re-use the Bitcoin source code, so they are identical to the Bitcoin protocol. However, as suggested use testnet.
staff
Activity: 4284
Merit: 8808
August 11, 2013, 01:36:12 AM
#2
You use testnet for this. Start bitcoin(d/qt) with -testnet=1.
newbie
Activity: 34
Merit: 0
August 11, 2013, 01:25:26 AM
#1
.
Jump to: