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Topic: First snapshot of bitcoin.org website (Read 1286 times)

administrator
Activity: 5166
Merit: 12850
legendary
Activity: 952
Merit: 1000
June 30, 2012, 03:32:03 PM
#5
Awesome!
legendary
Activity: 1722
Merit: 1003
June 30, 2012, 02:44:34 PM
#4
From the page:
"If the recipient is not online, it is possible to send to their Bitcoin address, which is a hash of their public key that they give you. ... This method has the disadvantage that no comment information is sent, and a bit of privacy may be lost if the address is used multiple times, but it is a useful alternative if both users can't be online at the same time or the recipient can't receive incoming connections."


It's funny that Satoshi seems to have considered sending coins to a Bitcoin address to be a secondary function; ie, just a "useful alternative", as he notes.
hero member
Activity: 726
Merit: 500
June 30, 2012, 12:50:19 PM
#3
I did stumble across the website in early 2009.  I was looking to see if there was any form of digital cash available which was similar to what had been discussed on the Cypherpunks mailing list years ago.  However, Bitcoin seemed too new and didn't seem like a workable option because nobody used it.  I ended up ignoring it and going with Pecunix instead for the particular project I was working on.  It wasn't until over a year later that I came across the site again and took a serious interest in Bitcoin.  It would have been nice to have been mining all that time.  Smiley
hero member
Activity: 836
Merit: 1007
"How do you eat an elephant? One bit at a time..."
June 30, 2012, 10:18:54 AM
#2
Very cool.
donator
Activity: 1653
Merit: 1286
Creator of Litecoin. Cryptocurrency enthusiast.
June 30, 2012, 06:26:25 AM
#1
I wanted to see what kind of website Satoshi put together for Bitcoin, so I search the Wayback Machine and got this:
http://web.archive.org/web/20090131115053/http://bitcoin.org/

It's kind of interesting reading Satoshi's own words about how bitcoins worked.
If you stumbled across this website in January of 2009, would you run this program created by this random dude named Satoshi? Smiley
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