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Topic: $ 1.000 (Read 3433 times)

hero member
Activity: 826
Merit: 501
in defi we trust
December 03, 2013, 09:44:49 AM
#47
Is going down, it may collapse i down to $965 I am afraid it can drop all the way to $20 dollars or to zero

I'm buying them form you at 30$ if you're afraid of a crash.
sr. member
Activity: 252
Merit: 250
December 03, 2013, 09:12:07 AM
#46
Yes, but there is always hope for higher correction if you want to buy coins Tongue


If by higher you mean a super crash down to 200$ or 100$ then i think you 'll have to wait for ever. If bitcoin goes down to 100$ then i don't think that it will ever recover again.
member
Activity: 116
Merit: 10
December 02, 2013, 07:45:14 PM
#45
Is going down, it may collapse i down to $965 I am afraid it can drop all the way to $20 dollars or to zero

Is going down is falling like a stone down to 880.... I think is the big crash

For the 100th time the big crash was just a correction. It is getting boring  Tongue


Yes, but there is always hope for higher correction if you want to buy coins Tongue
sr. member
Activity: 252
Merit: 250
December 02, 2013, 07:24:12 PM
#44
Is going down, it may collapse i down to $965 I am afraid it can drop all the way to $20 dollars or to zero

Is going down is falling like a stone down to 880.... I think is the big crash

For the 100th time the big crash was just a correction. It is getting boring  Tongue

Yes, and once everybody is truly comfortable with the idea that every downward motion is "just a correction" and "just a bulltrap", the true crash will present itself.

So the true crash should've happened like months ago?
hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 500
December 02, 2013, 07:22:27 PM
#43
Is going down, it may collapse i down to $965 I am afraid it can drop all the way to $20 dollars or to zero

Is going down is falling like a stone down to 880.... I think is the big crash

For the 100th time the big crash was just a correction. It is getting boring  Tongue

Yes, and once everybody is truly comfortable with the idea that every downward motion is "just a correction" and "just a bulltrap", the true crash will present itself.
sr. member
Activity: 252
Merit: 250
December 02, 2013, 04:13:02 PM
#42
Is going down, it may collapse i down to $965 I am afraid it can drop all the way to $20 dollars or to zero

Is going down is falling like a stone down to 880.... I think is the big crash

For the 100th time the big crash was just a correction. It is getting boring  Tongue
member
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
December 01, 2013, 07:24:45 PM
#41
Hazzar, we done it! now lets make it £1000 for us brits  Cheesy

We always got to be nice to those brits lets make it happen Lol!
member
Activity: 119
Merit: 10
December 01, 2013, 07:22:45 PM
#40
Is going down, it may collapse i down to $965 I am afraid it can drop all the way to $20 dollars or to zero

Is going down is falling like a stone down to 880.... I think is the big crash
member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
November 27, 2013, 03:21:44 PM
#39
Is going down, it may collapse i down to $965 I am afraid it can drop all the way to $20 dollars or to zero

Please collapse to $20, then I can jump on this train big time ^^
member
Activity: 119
Merit: 10
November 27, 2013, 02:34:41 PM
#38
Is going down, it may collapse i down to $965 I am afraid it can drop all the way to $20 dollars or to zero
sr. member
Activity: 433
Merit: 250
Crypto Angel
November 27, 2013, 02:17:00 PM
#37
I think its funny when I watch someone try to manipulate the market and buy a bunch slowly and then try to sell them all at once, Just like the just did 450 coin wall at 1000. So glad ppl cant short bitcoin! Buy slow, Sell fast! You just going to lose your money!

I didn't really understand what you mean and I can't really see what it has to do with the topic, but I personally am not into speculation, I buy when I can and hope someday btcs will be widely used as currency...also because with my minimal amount of btcs I wouldn't gain enough money to justify the risk of speculating, I probably would only when satoshis are like cents and µBtcs standard unit like 1$...sooo probably never Cheesy
sr. member
Activity: 448
Merit: 250
“A decentralized registry for unique assets”
November 27, 2013, 02:06:55 PM
#36
I think its funny when I watch someone try to manipulate the market and buy a bunch slowly and then try to sell them all at once, Just like the just did 450 coin wall at 1000. So glad ppl cant short bitcoin! Buy slow, Sell fast! You just going to lose your money!
sr. member
Activity: 433
Merit: 250
Crypto Angel
November 27, 2013, 01:38:53 PM
#35
Are you talking about $1.000 / mBIT?

$1.0000 = $1

I've seen this error a few times around here.
A . is a decimal point.
A , can be used to make big numbers easier.

Quote
if we consider the anglo-saxon numerical codification, you are right. I come from a latin European country, and our standard codification for numbers is the comma (,) for decimals and the point (.) for thousands, millions, etc. so that's why I'm actually wrong in an international environment.
Noted. Probably part of the reason Southern Europe is so shit at managing their finances if they don't know where the decimal point should go!


Quote
By the way I'm pretty sure that, according to the International System and in the accademical world, we should use the point for decimals, and don't use anything for thousands, millions etc., so to be completely right we should write 1000 if we mean a thousand  Grin
Agreed fully. I don't usually use commas myself. We are in the truly globalised information and monetary world now and commas in numbers are an unnecessary affectation!

well, if we want to be precise, we should note that the financial crysis originated from two anglo-saxon countries, from USA globally and from Germany's unfair economical procedures in the european area, but I see your statement in a provocatory/joke way and I'm smiling behind the keyboard  Cheesy note that I don't want to start any kind of war, mine also was a provocation, I have relatives and I have lived in the USA, and now I live in Germany and I totally love both places and the people of both countries, southern countries mainly have to learn from them  Wink

By the way, I agree that commas are usually unnecessary, but when the numbers start to get bigger than a billion, they might be useful, expecially when the digits aren't just zeroes  Smiley
Good natured bitcoin banter noted!
There are only two nationalities now - Bitcoiners and Fiatsters fellow citizen!

yeah!!! let's hope that more and more Fiatsters come to our side Cheesy

Hazzar, we done it! now lets make it £1000 for us brits  Cheesy

Or € 1.000 for us Europeans ^^

was about to write the same thing, damned 360 secs block for newbies  Grin

Hahaha yeah that's pretty annoying. But hang on it will end soon. And if you got nothing to do in the meantime: I got a blog for noobies ^^ Just to get you familiar with and to earn some coins for free: http://bitcoinpro.wordpress.com/free-bitcoins/

thanks, I'll take a look ^^
member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
November 27, 2013, 01:14:25 PM
#34
Hazzar, we done it! now lets make it £1000 for us brits  Cheesy

Or € 1.000 for us Europeans ^^

was about to write the same thing, damned 360 secs block for newbies  Grin

Hahaha yeah that's pretty annoying. But hang on it will end soon. And if you got nothing to do in the meantime: I got a blog for noobies ^^ Just to get you familiar with and to earn some coins for free: http://bitcoinpro.wordpress.com/free-bitcoins/
full member
Activity: 209
Merit: 100
November 27, 2013, 01:07:23 PM
#33
Are you talking about $1.000 / mBIT?

$1.0000 = $1

I've seen this error a few times around here.
A . is a decimal point.
A , can be used to make big numbers easier.

Quote
if we consider the anglo-saxon numerical codification, you are right. I come from a latin European country, and our standard codification for numbers is the comma (,) for decimals and the point (.) for thousands, millions, etc. so that's why I'm actually wrong in an international environment.
Noted. Probably part of the reason Southern Europe is so shit at managing their finances if they don't know where the decimal point should go!


Quote
By the way I'm pretty sure that, according to the International System and in the accademical world, we should use the point for decimals, and don't use anything for thousands, millions etc., so to be completely right we should write 1000 if we mean a thousand  Grin
Agreed fully. I don't usually use commas myself. We are in the truly globalised information and monetary world now and commas in numbers are an unnecessary affectation!

well, if we want to be precise, we should note that the financial crysis originated from two anglo-saxon countries, from USA globally and from Germany's unfair economical procedures in the european area, but I see your statement in a provocatory/joke way and I'm smiling behind the keyboard  Cheesy note that I don't want to start any kind of war, mine also was a provocation, I have relatives and I have lived in the USA, and now I live in Germany and I totally love both places and the people of both countries, southern countries mainly have to learn from them  Wink

By the way, I agree that commas are usually unnecessary, but when the numbers start to get bigger than a billion, they might be useful, expecially when the digits aren't just zeroes  Smiley
Good natured bitcoin banter noted!
There are only two nationalities now - Bitcoiners and Fiatsters fellow citizen!
sr. member
Activity: 433
Merit: 250
Crypto Angel
November 27, 2013, 12:52:25 PM
#32
If Gox hit $1000, who cares?

What matters is the other exchanges that actually allow one to withdraw fiat internationally do.

Come on, it was just symbolical, after all nothing is really worth celebrating, if we don't find a reason to do so  Wink
anyway on btc.de now the price is around 715 euros, which is almost close to 1k, and for my personal experience I guarantee that that site works, since the money payments are transfers directly between the seller and the buyer  Cheesy

edit: actually btc.de is only for europe...is the international situation really this bad? isn't there any site with working withdrawals?
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 286
Neptune, Scalable Privacy
November 27, 2013, 12:47:04 PM
#31
Are you talking about $1.000 / mBIT?

$1.0000 = $1

I've seen this error a few times around here.
A . is a decimal point.
A , can be used to make big numbers easier.

Quote
if we consider the anglo-saxon numerical codification, you are right. I come from a latin European country, and our standard codification for numbers is the comma (,) for decimals and the point (.) for thousands, millions, etc. so that's why I'm actually wrong in an international environment.
Noted. Probably part of the reason Southern Europe is so shit at managing their finances if they don't know where the decimal point should go!


Quote
By the way I'm pretty sure that, according to the International System and in the accademical world, we should use the point for decimals, and don't use anything for thousands, millions etc., so to be completely right we should write 1000 if we mean a thousand  Grin
Agreed fully. I don't usually use commas myself. We are in the truly globalised information and monetary world now and commas in numbers are an unnecessary affectation!
I like to use apostrophes since it is nice not to have to count zeros. Like 1'000'000 = 1 million
legendary
Activity: 2492
Merit: 1473
LEALANA Bitcoin Grim Reaper
November 27, 2013, 12:45:51 PM
#30
If Gox hit $1000, who cares?

What matters is the other exchanges that actually allow one to withdraw fiat internationally do.
sr. member
Activity: 433
Merit: 250
Crypto Angel
November 27, 2013, 12:43:25 PM
#29
Are you talking about $1.000 / mBIT?

$1.0000 = $1

I've seen this error a few times around here.
A . is a decimal point.
A , can be used to make big numbers easier.

Quote
if we consider the anglo-saxon numerical codification, you are right. I come from a latin European country, and our standard codification for numbers is the comma (,) for decimals and the point (.) for thousands, millions, etc. so that's why I'm actually wrong in an international environment.
Noted. Probably part of the reason Southern Europe is so shit at managing their finances if they don't know where the decimal point should go!


Quote
By the way I'm pretty sure that, according to the International System and in the accademical world, we should use the point for decimals, and don't use anything for thousands, millions etc., so to be completely right we should write 1000 if we mean a thousand  Grin
Agreed fully. I don't usually use commas myself. We are in the truly globalised information and monetary world now and commas in numbers are an unnecessary affectation!

well, if we want to be precise, we should note that the financial crysis originated from two anglo-saxon countries, from USA globally and from Germany's unfair economical procedures in the european area, but I see your statement in a provocatory/joke way and I'm smiling behind the keyboard  Cheesy note that I don't want to start any kind of war, mine also was a provocation, I have relatives and I have lived in the USA, and now I live in Germany and I totally love both places and the people of both countries, southern countries mainly have to learn from them  Wink

By the way, I agree that commas are usually unnecessary, but when the numbers start to get bigger than a billion, they might be useful, expecially when the digits aren't just zeroes  Smiley
full member
Activity: 209
Merit: 100
November 27, 2013, 12:29:45 PM
#28
Are you talking about $1.000 / mBIT?

$1.0000 = $1

I've seen this error a few times around here.
A . is a decimal point.
A , can be used to make big numbers easier.

Quote
if we consider the anglo-saxon numerical codification, you are right. I come from a latin European country, and our standard codification for numbers is the comma (,) for decimals and the point (.) for thousands, millions, etc. so that's why I'm actually wrong in an international environment.
Noted. Probably part of the reason Southern Europe is so shit at managing their finances if they don't know where the decimal point should go!


Quote
By the way I'm pretty sure that, according to the International System and in the accademical world, we should use the point for decimals, and don't use anything for thousands, millions etc., so to be completely right we should write 1000 if we mean a thousand  Grin
Agreed fully. I don't usually use commas myself. We are in the truly globalised information and monetary world now and commas in numbers are an unnecessary affectation!
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