That's not going to happen. This tells me you'll be lucky to catch anything ~ 0.016 flat.
Clearly we're not breaching that line, and there are major good events in near future - so sorry, there's no chance for 0.013.
P.S. If you really believed that - why did you buy @ 0.0179 and not 0.013
I would guess you probably try now to average your buy lower
Don't worry.
No one's going to be more happy than me if it doesn't go down from here because with any luck, most of my DRK is going to be tied up in a masternode if I can get b*strding OS/X Terminal to send a *&$@£$ing ctrl-X to the @%$!ng linux text editor and get me past step 6 of chaeplin's guide.
I should've taken GhostPlayer's advice and ditched terminal for a native Ubuntu installation but that would've taken me another day. As it is I've now become an incidental expert in 1960'a ANSI escape code technology
At least I'll have an excuse to hold then if the price takes leave of itself. Believe it or not, I find trading quite stressful unless I'm buying Jackpotcoin at 3 Satoshis where my biggest worry is that it doesn't get past 10.
P.S. If you really believed that - why did you buy @ 0.0179 and not 0.013
I would guess you probably try now to average your buy lower
Simply because I was more worried about losing my DRK altogether than about them losing value. If you look back at my posts, you'll see I had a bit of a change of perspective regarding the amount of 'network effect' that was contributing to it's value. I decided I'd underestimated it given the amount of fiat exchanges that were popping up, especially in China. I also decided that I liked the way Evan does things. I've been a professional business software developer for 25 years but I don't really consider myself a "geek" - I like the business side of it and I think that helps you keep a healthy perspective and not get too carried away with theoretical detail.
Evan seems to have a very rare and well balanced combination of practical business nouss while at the same time being able to code up highly innovative and successful solutions. The third corner of that triangle that I like is the academic basis behind the Darksend technology - this guy here, the inventor or "Blind Signatures". Talk about being ahead of your time - over 30 odd years it turns out in this case:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_ChaumI never realised all this stuff. The origins of Darkcoin go right back to 1983 in this paper:
http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-1-4757-0602-4_18They had all this thought out way back then, just waiting for the right commercial implementation to arrive. Well now it appears it has.