Should be a lesson to never rush to market without a complete product.
Best of luck though, like Tor was to RZR and such this is also a neat simple feature to add a layer of anon
Anon is like one function of many new functions of this coin though; to most of us anon is an afterthought. Notice anon is the last thing and easily the least amazing feature of this launch.
"So why NeosCoin? What's so special about it?
NeosCoin offers an interface that completely deviates from the norm. It's user-friendly, very familiar, packed with features, and incredibly fast. At any given point, based on our community's request we can begin development on an unrestricted level due the fact it's written in PHP. I might add, local PHP, not requiring a webserver or on a website. The Windows interface is a compiled version of PHP.
The interface.
When you open the NeosCoin interface, you're presented with a dashboard. There you'll find the following information:
1) Any messages from our development team
2) Your wallet balance locally as well as your balance on any exchanges that list NeosCoin
3) The rate NeosCoin is going for at supported exchanges
4) The current difficulty of all 3 algorithms
5) The hashrate of all 3 algorithms
Then you'll see a graph displaying the market interest so you can get a good idea of what type of market it is, based on the last 100 orders (sell and buy volume).
Below that is our Twitter feed so you can keep with the latest news regarding NeosCoin socially. Next to that area is your transactions overview.
I'd like to make note at this point that in the settings area, you can enable/disable: twitter updates, news & updates, the number of transactions to show in the overview and the number of tweets to display on the dashboard.
You can do everything in the NeosCoin interface that you could in your old-style wallets, just quicker typically. You can view all of your transactions, generate new wallet addresses, send NEOS to another person.
Now let's get into something a bit different: In-wallet trading, yes, you can do everything from within your wallet without having to open up another browser window - including simply entering an amount to deposit to your Bittrex (or other supported exchange) account by just entering the amount and clicking send.
I tried to make the trading interface almost a carbon copy of what you're used to when you visit the exchange. When you open the Bittrex trading area, you'll see the following:
1) Your local NEOS balance
2) Your Bittrex NEOS balance
3) Your Bittrex BTC balance
Below that you'll get information such as: the Last,Bid, and Ask. 24 hour high/low, the volume in BTC and the volume in NEOS. Next you'll have control and view over your open orders. Following that directly beneath is your buy/sell areas. All of the calculations are done for you here on-the-fly if you wanted to for example max out your buys or sells. The order books are displayed next below. All of these numbers and orders are within 3-5 seconds real-time. Operating through the Bittrex API tends to be more responsive, quicker, and more accurate.
Pool stats and information.
Not just generic stats, but your personal miner/worker stats. Yes, it's time to take things to the next level.
The block explorer is a known useful tool and it's included in the wallet.
We've also included a web-based IRC client so you can come join us in chat if you have any questions, need a hand, or just want to talk with the NeosCoin community.
I've also set up a help desk where you can submit tickets in the event you have questions or issues, which is accessible through the wallet.
So now I suppose the question lingering is "What the heck is Arbitrush?"
It's what I've named the anonymous-tx system I've written from the ground up. This system isn't like other approaches (or lack thereof as many have yet to come to fruition). I think it sounds pretty cool and if you say it fast it sounds like "Arbitrage" - great movie.
You're given the option to use Arbitrush but with the understanding that in your region or area, it could be considered immoral or some sort of grey area. As I said, this is just for project purposes and proof of concept. We hold no liability if it's misused.
So a typical transaction would conduct as such:
Sender -> Recipient (on the blockchain shows where the coin came from)
If you enable Arbitrush:
Sender -> multi-homed farm -> Recipient (the sender "never sent" the coins, or so the blockchain thinks, it just came from "somewhere")
Now with the fact it's anonymous, how can you verify the funds did in fact arrive at the intended destination?
Easily. Within the wallet interface is an area named "Arbitrush transactions". Here only the sender (who is authorized via a one-time key-pairing in the Arbitrush system) can see the status on the blockchain of the transaction and the intended recipient (whom of course they already know anyway because well, they sent it there). Proof of Transaction."