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Topic: 2013-03-19 Economist.com Daily Chart: A Bit Expensive (Read 1550 times)

full member
Activity: 206
Merit: 100
You DON'T think it looks like a bubble?

When I saw the price, I dusted off my loose change and liquidated it. Good luck to you.
legendary
Activity: 1526
Merit: 1134
Tom Standage, technology editor of The Economist, has actually watched the talk I gave at the 2012 conference (the one on contracts). That's about a million percent more research than most journalists do.

That said, not all of TE's coverage of Bitcoin comes from his team. But I second Vandroiy. I am a regular reader of TE because whenever they write about things I understand, they usually nail it. It's always worth paying attention to what is written there.
legendary
Activity: 1036
Merit: 1002
The minor error aside, it might not be wise to label the article as "fail" and move on.

The Economist has a brutal track record of writing correct predictions. I don't know of anything in the media that matches it. Of course they're wrong at times, everyone is -- but that's no good reason to ignore them.

There is no reason to call the article wrong anyway -- it certainly looks like a bubble, which is all they're saying. A little caution should be good advice here.
hero member
Activity: 931
Merit: 500
It must be difficult to write a quality article about Bitcoin without detailed understanding of it.
Quote
As more coins are generated, these problems get ever more complex
No they don't. The same code is used, but the difficulty increases, it gets harder to find a fitting checksum that is sought for a number of leading zero numbers in a hash. These are necessary technical details to avoid people writing articles which may be strongly misleading.

+1

When I first heard about the "problems" that get more complex, I thought that it was several different equations, one more complex than the other. It was a bit odd.

Later, way later, I discovered that it is just one problem, that gets bigger or smaller, taking more or less time to solve (more or less zeroes at the beginning of the result).

Brute elegance.

legendary
Activity: 1246
Merit: 1010
It must be difficult to write a quality article about Bitcoin without detailed understanding of it.
Quote
As more coins are generated, these problems get ever more complex
No they don't. The same code is used, but the difficulty increases, it gets harder to find a fitting checksum that is sought for a number of leading zero numbers in a hash. These are necessary technical details to avoid people writing articles which may be strongly misleading.

Nope!  Do more research & try again!  Hint: the difficulty changes to create a constant average block creation rate as more (or less) transaction processing capacity (aka mining) comes online.

sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 250
Magic Staff
It must be difficult to write a quality article about Bitcoin without detailed understanding of it.
Quote
As more coins are generated, these problems get ever more complex
No they don't. The same code is used, but the difficulty increases, it gets harder to find a fitting checksum that is sought for a number of leading zero numbers in a hash. These are necessary technical details to avoid people writing articles which may be strongly misleading.
sr. member
Activity: 362
Merit: 250
Wrong date: 2013-03-19

Thanks - just a slip of the finger. Fixed it.
legendary
Activity: 1232
Merit: 1001
Wrong date: 2013-03-19
legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1020
Stupidest bitcoin article by The Economist thus far.
full member
Activity: 210
Merit: 100
They love bitcoin, they just want to buy it cheaper Wink

LOL!  Grin
member
Activity: 60
Merit: 10
They love bitcoin, they just want to buy it cheaper Wink
legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1008
If you want to walk on water, get out of the boat
Fail article.

I wonder why The Economist hate bitcoin so much  Roll Eyes
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