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Topic: How we crypto-geeks get it wrong & the reality of altcoin success. - page 2. (Read 6509 times)

legendary
Activity: 1876
Merit: 1000
Lets be honest, pretty much the entire alt community is comprised of 3 groups;

group A) mine anything that will get them more BTC (and thus fiat),

who sells to;

group B) the missed the BTC boat crowd.


group c) the 3 people making all these crap coins and coming up with innovative stories to suck both A) and B) in
legendary
Activity: 1156
Merit: 1000
And the madness continues...

I saw a post on the ANN forum, that said XXXcoin (which will remain nameless), the original x15 coin....

Really? You guys think the users care?
legendary
Activity: 996
Merit: 1013
You're absolutely right. Strangely, this scene is a lot like Internet Marketing.

The comparison is interesting. Internet marketing has been around
longer than crypto scene and is somewhat more matured now. The problem there
is that so many people are making money on internet teaching people how to make money on internet
(by teaching people how to make money on internet.. you get the idea...)
... but the demand is shifting more and more towards legit and sustainable business operations.
Gaming the search engines is too demanding now, it is left in the province of very shady people
who are prepared to spend lots of money and move fast.

Crypto simply hasn't reached that point in its evolution yet. Maybe
a day will come when we too speak about "white hat" vs "black hat" devs as they do
in IM. 

legendary
Activity: 924
Merit: 1000
I'll say up front I haven't read the whole thread. 

Here is my problem with 99% of new altcoins.  They are just ideas.  Someone has a big idea, makes a coin, gets it on an exchange as quick as possible and most of the time the coin pumps and dumps and dies.  In my opinion for an alt coin right now to succeed a lot work must be done before it's announced and mined.  Software must be developed, games/casino/etc up the minute the coin launches, debit/credit cards with coins available right away, the blockchain and all wallets pre-made, etc. 

So many coins come out with nothing but a plan, gets some coins, makes some BTC and decided it's too much work to actually do what was purposed or never planned on doing it anyways. 

You're absolutely right. Strangely, this scene is a lot like Internet Marketing. A guide on "How I Got Rick Quick And How You Can Too" sells like hotcakes. The favourite methods are "sniper" sales Websites which have a short shelf life because they essentially rely on a cunning trick - typically, fooling Google into giving them a page-1 ranking - which lasts only as long as Google's anti-spam team finds out about it and the big G updates their algo to make the trick obsolete.

There's very few people who are interested in putting in the heavy lifting and long-term legwork to make a solid business. Advice along that line is really unpopular, even if it comes from a fully established Internet Marketer who pulls in six figures per year. 
sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 250
I'll say up front I haven't read the whole thread.  

Here is my problem with 99% of new altcoins.  They are just ideas.  Someone has a big idea, makes a coin, gets it on an exchange as quick as possible and most of the time the coin pumps and dumps and dies.  In my opinion for an alt coin right now to succeed a lot work must be done before it's announced and mined.  Software must be developed, games/casino/etc up the minute the coin launches, debit/credit cards with coins available right away, the blockchain and all wallets pre-made, etc.  

So many coins come out with nothing but a plan, gets some coins, makes some BTC and decided it's too much work to actually do what was purposed or never planned on doing it anyways.  There needs to be better use-ability in the now and not just in the present.  Just my 2 cents.

Definitely agree with that. I just saw an IPO for something I think is called Checkcoin, and I thought the idea was really good and has huge potential, but I can't really justify giving them any money because it was exactly what you described - purely an idea with no evidence that they've done anything yet or that they are capable of doing what they say.


I did agree with your statement but after having mail contact i was pretty convinced that these guys are really trying to pull this thing off the ground, and just to make sure that this is not another scam team i tried to call them and that also was a success. I spoke to the same guy that mailed me. I asked them again about the future plans and what the plans are considering the IPO. They told me everything that they were planning to do and specified almost every investment they needed to do to let this idea be a success. So I’m pretty convinced that this could be a good investment and a great idea for the crypto world. After all the confirmations I feel very comfortable to invest so I invested 1 btc for 25.000 Checkcoin.

So thumbs up for me!

They have a telephone and an email address??!!! Damn those guys really mean business. That's an impressive resume right there.

Btw I'm not saying they are a scam or that they can't deliver, just that I didn't really feel confident enough in what I saw to put my money on the line. And it really is a good idea so I don't want to put people off taking a look and making up their own minds on this.
member
Activity: 94
Merit: 10
I'll say up front I haven't read the whole thread.  

Here is my problem with 99% of new altcoins.  They are just ideas.  Someone has a big idea, makes a coin, gets it on an exchange as quick as possible and most of the time the coin pumps and dumps and dies.  In my opinion for an alt coin right now to succeed a lot work must be done before it's announced and mined.  Software must be developed, games/casino/etc up the minute the coin launches, debit/credit cards with coins available right away, the blockchain and all wallets pre-made, etc.  

So many coins come out with nothing but a plan, gets some coins, makes some BTC and decided it's too much work to actually do what was purposed or never planned on doing it anyways.  There needs to be better use-ability in the now and not just in the present.  Just my 2 cents.

Definitely agree with that. I just saw an IPO for something I think is called Checkcoin, and I thought the idea was really good and has huge potential, but I can't really justify giving them any money because it was exactly what you described - purely an idea with no evidence that they've done anything yet or that they are capable of doing what they say.


I did agree with your statement but after having mail contact i was pretty convinced that these guys are really trying to pull this thing off the ground, and just to make sure that this is not another scam team i tried to call them and that also was a success. I spoke to the same guy that mailed me. I asked them again about the future plans and what the plans are considering the IPO. They told me everything that they were planning to do and specified almost every investment they needed to do to let this idea be a success. So I’m pretty convinced that this could be a good investment and a great idea for the crypto world. After all the confirmations I feel very comfortable to invest so I invested 1 btc for 25.000 Checkcoin.

So thumbs up for me!
sr. member
Activity: 952
Merit: 251
"I have seen coins trading on exchanges that don't even have working Windows or MAC wallets."

Seems to be a trend .. on purpose I think .. geeks only ..

Triff ..
legendary
Activity: 1156
Merit: 1000
I'll say up front I haven't read the whole thread. 

Here is my problem with 99% of new altcoins.  They are just ideas.  Someone has a big idea, makes a coin, gets it on an exchange as quick as possible and most of the time the coin pumps and dumps and dies.  In my opinion for an alt coin right now to succeed a lot work must be done before it's announced and mined.  Software must be developed, games/casino/etc up the minute the coin launches, debit/credit cards with coins available right away, the blockchain and all wallets pre-made, etc. 

So many coins come out with nothing but a plan, gets some coins, makes some BTC and decided it's too much work to actually do what was purposed or never planned on doing it anyways.  There needs to be better use-ability in the now and not just in the present.  Just my 2 cents.

Definitely agree with that. I just saw an IPO for something I think is called Checkcoin, and I thought the idea was really good and has huge potential, but I can't really justify giving them any money because it was exactly what you described - purely an idea with no evidence that they've done anything yet or that they are capable of doing what they say.

I agree. I have seen coins trading on exchanges that don't even have working Windows or MAC wallets. I can tell you from experience, to build a real user community, everything must work when it is released. The members of this forum may accept a period of stuff not working (perhaps because they are blinded by the hype), the user community, who are not familiar with cryptos will not.
sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 250
I'll say up front I haven't read the whole thread. 

Here is my problem with 99% of new altcoins.  They are just ideas.  Someone has a big idea, makes a coin, gets it on an exchange as quick as possible and most of the time the coin pumps and dumps and dies.  In my opinion for an alt coin right now to succeed a lot work must be done before it's announced and mined.  Software must be developed, games/casino/etc up the minute the coin launches, debit/credit cards with coins available right away, the blockchain and all wallets pre-made, etc. 

So many coins come out with nothing but a plan, gets some coins, makes some BTC and decided it's too much work to actually do what was purposed or never planned on doing it anyways.  There needs to be better use-ability in the now and not just in the present.  Just my 2 cents.

Definitely agree with that. I just saw an IPO for something I think is called Checkcoin, and I thought the idea was really good and has huge potential, but I can't really justify giving them any money because it was exactly what you described - purely an idea with no evidence that they've done anything yet or that they are capable of doing what they say.
full member
Activity: 209
Merit: 100
I'll say up front I haven't read the whole thread. 

Here is my problem with 99% of new altcoins.  They are just ideas.  Someone has a big idea, makes a coin, gets it on an exchange as quick as possible and most of the time the coin pumps and dumps and dies.  In my opinion for an alt coin right now to succeed a lot work must be done before it's announced and mined.  Software must be developed, games/casino/etc up the minute the coin launches, debit/credit cards with coins available right away, the blockchain and all wallets pre-made, etc. 

So many coins come out with nothing but a plan, gets some coins, makes some BTC and decided it's too much work to actually do what was purposed or never planned on doing it anyways.  There needs to be better use-ability in the now and not just in the present.  Just my 2 cents.
sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 250
Dogecoin was a victim of its own success.

The whole point in Dogecoin was that it was mostly just a bit of fun - nothing to take seriously. As long as that was true it was successful, but then as soon as it started shooting up in value and people started realizing that their coins were valuable and others started thinking it was an opportunity to profit, then it was innevitable that people would start taking it seriously - and that was the death knell of the Doge.

Whether Dogecoin recovers in price is something entirely separate from whether Dogecoin should be considered successful, because it was never supposed to be valuable, and it was never supposed to be an investment or make people rich.

I wouldn't count Dogecoin out. The shibe community has shrunk recently, but the holder-ons are just as undaunted. DOGE probably won't be an ace speculation, but it is going to be a "real" cryptocurrency...the poor man's Bitcoin.

Good. I wouldn't count it out either.
legendary
Activity: 924
Merit: 1000
Dogecoin was a victim of its own success.

The whole point in Dogecoin was that it was mostly just a bit of fun - nothing to take seriously. As long as that was true it was successful, but then as soon as it started shooting up in value and people started realizing that their coins were valuable and others started thinking it was an opportunity to profit, then it was innevitable that people would start taking it seriously - and that was the death knell of the Doge.

Whether Dogecoin recovers in price is something entirely separate from whether Dogecoin should be considered successful, because it was never supposed to be valuable, and it was never supposed to be an investment or make people rich.

I wouldn't count Dogecoin out. The shibe community has shrunk recently, but the holder-ons are just as undaunted. DOGE probably won't be an ace speculation, but it is going to be a "real" cryptocurrency...the poor man's Bitcoin.
member
Activity: 115
Merit: 10
2014 is the year where the multipools and big farms have killed the fragile equilibrium between buyers and sellers of the alternates. I don't think that 99% of alternate owner want bitcoins; anyway multipools users, and a lot of big farms are only there for bitcoins. They are just there for massively dump everything they get, to get bitcoins, this game is only a short term strategy; after a few months of this game GPU mining don't even worth the electricity. We can just hope that these farms are doomed to close, with enough debts to stay out of cryptos.

We have also so many scams issues, lying in the software implementation for some (do you know a X11 POW coins that is really fair, without premined or equivalent implementation?), or coins with ICO scheme and, so on... Anyway the recovery will take months or years...
sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 250
Dogecoin was a victim of its own success.

The whole point in Dogecoin was that it was mostly just a bit of fun - nothing to take seriously. As long as that was true it was successful, but then as soon as it started shooting up in value and people started realizing that their coins were valuable and others started thinking it was an opportunity to profit, then it was innevitable that people would start taking it seriously - and that was the death knell of the Doge.

Whether Dogecoin recovers in price is something entirely separate from whether Dogecoin should be considered successful, because it was never supposed to be valuable, and it was never supposed to be an investment or make people rich.
member
Activity: 72
Merit: 10
This is a very interesting read - I was wondering what's happening with some of the main players in altcoins, though it would be a shame to see the likes of Doge etc. go so suddenly, if indeed it's on the cards. As others said, Bitcoin needs some kind of alternative surely!
sr. member
Activity: 350
Merit: 254
There is an old saying about success of retail stores - The secret is location, location, location!

If I may paraphrase for altcoins - It would be community, community, community!

Yes. Dogecoin, leaving aside its current grindingly slow bear market, did teach us that.

I agree, Doge indeed is the leader in a community focused coin. Despite all the negative comments in these forums, Doge taught us all something about building a user community.


yes, though I wonder how much of doge is down to the brand, not community itself. for example, I thinking of cryptonote coins eg monero which has strong community sure, but no real brand. However, with a strong brand you need someone to manage it, and doge's recovery i think will show us whether its example really is something we can all learn from or not...
legendary
Activity: 1156
Merit: 1000
There is an old saying about success of retail stores - The secret is location, location, location!

If I may paraphrase for altcoins - It would be community, community, community!

Yes. Dogecoin, leaving aside its current grindingly slow bear market, did teach us that.

I agree, Doge indeed is the leader in a community focused coin. Despite all the negative comments in these forums, Doge taught us all something about building a user community.
legendary
Activity: 1106
Merit: 1000
The fact is some technical developments do make a difference to the user experience and security.

Qora has decentralised trading which is planned to become anonymous so obviously you have there the possibility to trade all kinds of things including a gold, fiats, companies etc. All in a decentralised way that can't be observed or depend on completely insecure trading sites.

In a word. Technology matters.


Don't confuse the unimportance and gimmicky nature of mining algos to real developments that are going to mature cryptocurrencies to the next level. I love Bitcoin but anyone who knows much about Bitcoin knows it has some serious technological limitations that need to be solved. Qora solves these limitations.

People are right to hype a cryptocurrencies because one or a few of them are likely to go from what is a tiny tiny minuscule market to potentially global mainstream usage. The thing people get wrong however is they hype coins with technical gimmicks that no one but miners and freaks will care about later. It's all about user friendliness and function. That's why I'm so positive about Qora cause ai think the developer understands this and is quietly making what could well be the next financial revolution work.
newbie
Activity: 48
Merit: 0
I've seen the altcoin scene quickly devolve since the release of Dogecoin at the end of 2013. The release of new gimmicky coins started to really pick up around that point and then went into full force in early 2014. And it is almost now 100% about creating the next pump-and-dump that will make you a profit. Kind of sad really as people trying to launch a legitimate coin, like it seems you might be trying to do, just get drowned out by all the scamcoins.

Well said. But I think it's a matter of one's investment goals. If you want to profit from short-term trades (riding the pump & dump), or if you want to invest long-term. But those goals must be clear.

The hottest new algo may give you a chance to profit from short-term volatility, but don't kid yourself, that hyped new coin, will die in a few weeks when another technological advance replaces it. If you want to invest long-term, it's the user community, the ones who actually spend the coins that will make the difference.

+1
It is indeed a choice, and they are almost always mutually exclusive. The times that they are, you know that you have a keeper on your hands.
legendary
Activity: 924
Merit: 1000
There is an old saying about success of retail stores - The secret is location, location, location!

If I may paraphrase for altcoins - It would be community, community, community!

Yes. Dogecoin, leaving aside its current grindingly slow bear market, did teach us that.
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