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Topic: [ANN][ICO] TransitionCoin - The Last Token You'll Ever Need - page 2. (Read 565 times)

jr. member
Activity: 164
Merit: 1

After full launch how many do you expect to need?

That's a good question.

I imagine it would depend a lot on how successful the ICO is.
full member
Activity: 512
Merit: 101
How many people are working on the team currently full time?

After full launch how many do you expect to need?
jr. member
Activity: 164
Merit: 1
This beats the hell out of burning people and contributing to more atmospheric pollution, or even worse pumping people with all sorts of preserving chemicals that are horrible for the environment. Only humans could mess up something as simple as dying.
newbie
Activity: 14
Merit: 0
At this point I'm only wondering how much the whole process would cost?
newbie
Activity: 14
Merit: 0
This project is amazing. I am sure if you launched in 2017 you would've raised $50M-100M ICO! I'll be following this, also going to refer it to some friends.

A lot of people have heard about crypto in the past year but people are scared to jump into buying since the crash, even though this is the best time for them to buy in. I definitely think we are bottoming out…. Anyways, great project, makes me excited for crypto again. I'll be a token buyer.
copper member
Activity: 17
Merit: 0
Is there a minimum amount of tokens required to buy to participate in the presale?
Yes, due to the expense of accredited investor checks there is a $2,000 minimum.

That's not too bad. Will the minimum go up during the main sale or stay the same?

It will not go up.
jr. member
Activity: 164
Merit: 1
I saw this video and immediately thought of you guys!  http://t.ted.com/z2SS9Rm

If you don't have time to watch I will break it down real quick.

Basically, she wants to use a mushroom burial suit to help decompose bodies in a more environmentally friendly way since the mushrooms are capable of breaking down a lot of the environmental toxins we accumulate throughout our lives.

newbie
Activity: 193
Merit: 0
So would this include the costs of the land needed?
newbie
Activity: 61
Merit: 0
Honestly, I am sure that cremation is much better than burying a decaying body. I am sure that this is also a concern for the soul. Cremation releases the soul faster. It will no longer be tied to the decomposing body and the process of its ascent will be faster.
We're the first to say each to their own. But cremation wastes a lot of energy and is polluting. Is that the parting eco-statement you really want to make? The "ashes" are really just ground-up bone fragments. I'd rather transition into rose bushes or a tree, maybe a dogwood or Giant Sequoia.

I always thought the green burials consisted of a cremation first and then using the ashes to help fertilize the small tree. Is this not the case? They just put the whole body in the ground?

That is correct,  The whole body is wrapped in a shroud or biodegragable casket (bamboo, willow) and buried 3 feet dep. At that depth it can decompose quickly and provide nutrients to plant life. There is no expensive, sealed casket, no concrete vault (required by most cemeteries), no big headstone, and no herbicides/pesticides to  maintain a green lawn.

I think that you will order to bury your body somewhere in the park, where some beauties in a bikini under a tree that grows out of your decayed brain will warm up your bodies on your grave. But, the bones decompose for quite a while. And about the crematorium. There are installed filters and no pollution. In any case, you will quickly go to heaven or hell, it all depends on what you do.

Well, that's the craziest thing I've seen today. Time to get off the internet now, thank you.
sr. member
Activity: 574
Merit: 253
Honestly, I am sure that cremation is much better than burying a decaying body. I am sure that this is also a concern for the soul. Cremation releases the soul faster. It will no longer be tied to the decomposing body and the process of its ascent will be faster.
We're the first to say each to their own. But cremation wastes a lot of energy and is polluting. Is that the parting eco-statement you really want to make? The "ashes" are really just ground-up bone fragments. I'd rather transition into rose bushes or a tree, maybe a dogwood or Giant Sequoia.

I always thought the green burials consisted of a cremation first and then using the ashes to help fertilize the small tree. Is this not the case? They just put the whole body in the ground?

That is correct,  The whole body is wrapped in a shroud or biodegragable casket (bamboo, willow) and buried 3 feet dep. At that depth it can decompose quickly and provide nutrients to plant life. There is no expensive, sealed casket, no concrete vault (required by most cemeteries), no big headstone, and no herbicides/pesticides to  maintain a green lawn.

I think that you will order to bury your body somewhere in the park, where some beauties in a bikini under a tree that grows out of your decayed brain will warm up your bodies on your grave. But, the bones decompose for quite a while. And about the crematorium. There are installed filters and no pollution. In any case, you will quickly go to heaven or hell, it all depends on what you do.
sr. member
Activity: 770
Merit: 250
Does this team have experience with this kind of work?
full member
Activity: 476
Merit: 100
Is there a minimum amount of tokens required to buy to participate in the presale?
Yes, due to the expense of accredited investor checks there is a $2,000 minimum.

That's not too bad. Will the minimum go up during the main sale or stay the same?
newbie
Activity: 3
Merit: 0
Is there a minimum amount of tokens required to buy to participate in the presale?
Yes, due to the expense of accredited investor checks there is a $2,000 minimum.
newbie
Activity: 3
Merit: 0
Honestly, I am sure that cremation is much better than burying a decaying body. I am sure that this is also a concern for the soul. Cremation releases the soul faster. It will no longer be tied to the decomposing body and the process of its ascent will be faster.
We're the first to say each to their own. But cremation wastes a lot of energy and is polluting. Is that the parting eco-statement you really want to make? The "ashes" are really just ground-up bone fragments. I'd rather transition into rose bushes or a tree, maybe a dogwood or Giant Sequoia.

I always thought the green burials consisted of a cremation first and then using the ashes to help fertilize the small tree. Is this not the case? They just put the whole body in the ground?

That is correct,  The whole body is wrapped in a shroud or biodegragable casket (bamboo, willow) and buried 3 feet dep. At that depth it can decompose quickly and provide nutrients to plant life. There is no expensive, sealed casket, no concrete vault (required by most cemeteries), no big headstone, and no herbicides/pesticides to  maintain a green lawn.
full member
Activity: 476
Merit: 100
Is there a minimum amount of tokens required to buy to participate in the presale?
full member
Activity: 486
Merit: 101
Honestly, I am sure that cremation is much better than burying a decaying body. I am sure that this is also a concern for the soul. Cremation releases the soul faster. It will no longer be tied to the decomposing body and the process of its ascent will be faster.
We're the first to say each to their own. But cremation wastes a lot of energy and is polluting. Is that the parting eco-statement you really want to make? The "ashes" are really just ground-up bone fragments. I'd rather transition into rose bushes or a tree, maybe a dogwood or Giant Sequoia.

I always thought the green burials consisted of a cremation first and then using the ashes to help fertilize the small tree. Is this not the case? They just put the whole body in the ground?
copper member
Activity: 17
Merit: 0
Honestly, I am sure that cremation is much better than burying a decaying body. I am sure that this is also a concern for the soul. Cremation releases the soul faster. It will no longer be tied to the decomposing body and the process of its ascent will be faster.
We're the first to say each to their own. But cremation wastes a lot of energy and is polluting. Is that the parting eco-statement you really want to make? The "ashes" are really just ground-up bone fragments. I'd rather transition into rose bushes or a tree, maybe a dogwood or Giant Sequoia.
copper member
Activity: 17
Merit: 0
Haha, the last token you'll ever need. That's actually really clever.

Well, it was that or "Think Outside the Box." Got any others?
full member
Activity: 486
Merit: 101
I like the idea of having a big beautiful living tree to mark my burial a hell of a lot more than a cold dead stone.
jr. member
Activity: 164
Merit: 1
Haha, the last token you'll ever need. That's actually really clever.
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