Author

Topic: dealing with 600 cryptocurrencies (Read 831 times)

member
Activity: 60
Merit: 10
December 23, 2014, 07:26:27 AM
#5
Easier to avoid shitcoins

That's what I was thinking. Would be easier just to keep bitcoin. These alts will be worth less and less the longer you keep them.
legendary
Activity: 2912
Merit: 1060
December 23, 2014, 06:18:11 AM
#4
Easier to avoid shitcoins
sr. member
Activity: 293
Merit: 251
Director - www.cubeform.io
December 20, 2014, 12:51:04 AM
#3
Chances are if your holding that many cryptos, your doing so out of novelty as opposed to investment. Or if you are investing and just holding that many 'just incase' one xplodes, regardless, perhaps you should consider just saving your keys/wallet backups for all of them and not running all the wallets all the time. When you need to use one, fire up a new Digital ocean Droplet or sandbox environment, install the newest wallet for that coin and do what you need etc.

I
sr. member
Activity: 293
Merit: 251
Director - www.cubeform.io
December 20, 2014, 12:47:34 AM
#2
http://sourceforge.net/projects/multicoin/ But if you want to manage that many, your going to need alot of HD space and some coding experience to extend support for those additional chains beyond the few it supports...

Also http://ufasoft.com/coin/ http://coinomi.com/
hero member
Activity: 522
Merit: 500
December 19, 2014, 10:12:06 PM
#1
Ok, the title is a little bit of hyperbole; but I have started to accrue a wide variety of currencies.

Given the risk of using all these wallets and such created by random people I want to move them onto a Linux VPS that I remotely connect to to deal with my financial shit.

Assuming the linux box is secure, reliable and relatively unknown (as a wallet should be) is there any software out there currently that helps you deal with so many wallets at once?

Thanks.
Jump to: