Pages:
Author

Topic: This is why bitcoin will go up X5-X10 more (Read 3003 times)

newbie
Activity: 51
Merit: 0
November 30, 2013, 05:20:27 AM
#23
I have two $1300 Raspberry Pis Cheesy

Ha, I can top that with my $5600 Raspberry Pi :|
hero member
Activity: 634
Merit: 500
November 30, 2013, 04:29:21 AM
#22
Bought some stuff as well, also not sorry, but you can't help but go: "Wow, that bike I bought is now a 80000$ bike" ^^

On the other hand, if you ever sell anything for Bitcoin you can't help but go: "Holy shit, I sold that bike for $80000"

I got tipped 0.17BTC for teaching somebody on here the alphabet in numeric format. At the time it was ~$5.
sr. member
Activity: 280
Merit: 250
November 30, 2013, 04:26:48 AM
#21

The 10K pizza guy is mentioned a lot.

Because thinking that you digested what 99.99% of people on earth will be unable to earn in their lifetime must be maddening if you don't control your greed Smiley

It is not completely true that this started btc economy, but it sure was one of the very highly referred to transactions. Thing is, this is not a million dollar pizza, it actually was a (still overpriced) $42 pizza. Value of something makes sense only at one point in time; it is a completely different object at a different time, you can't compare 10k btc from 2009 with 10k btc in 2013 - they are completely different things, one of which has been held tight through numerous hacks, rallies and crashes, hard drive failures and so on, so naturally they have much more value than 2009 coins - these were some rough times.

Indeed.  The more battle-hardened the concept is, the more valuable it will be.  People complain about how hard it is to use, how it has such a small chance of really "making it", low adoption rate, etc.  The truth is, if it had all of those things, you wouldn't be able to afford a mB let alone a full Bitcoin.
sr. member
Activity: 308
Merit: 250
November 30, 2013, 03:50:25 AM
#20
I've personally bought a lot of stuff with Bitcoin, and not sorry for it. Grin

Bought some stuff as well, also not sorry, but you can't help but go: "Wow, that bike I bought is now a 80000$ bike" ^^
Edit: That bike cost $80,000 only if you didn't replace the btc you used for the purchase. I always make a replacement purchase of btc before spending them.

yes, replacement is the key indeed, have learned a lot since then
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1010
Borsche
November 26, 2013, 01:43:09 PM
#19

The 10K pizza guy is mentioned a lot.

Because thinking that you digested what 99.99% of people on earth will be unable to earn in their lifetime must be maddening if you don't control your greed Smiley

It is not completely true that this started btc economy, but it sure was one of the very highly referred to transactions. Thing is, this is not a million dollar pizza, it actually was a (still overpriced) $42 pizza. Value of something makes sense only at one point in time; it is a completely different object at a different time, you can't compare 10k btc from 2009 with 10k btc in 2013 - they are completely different things, one of which has been held tight through numerous hacks, rallies and crashes, hard drive failures and so on, so naturally they have much more value than 2009 coins - these were some rough times.
full member
Activity: 122
Merit: 100
November 26, 2013, 12:58:14 PM
#18
The market value of all bitcoins right now is 9-10 BIL$.
Market value of A medium size bank in the US is around 50 BIL$.
A big bank (C, BOF) - 150 BIL $


You can not compare Bitcoin to market value of one bank only, this technology is much faster and can replace all today banks. X5-X10 more is very conservative given how usefull Bitcoin is
legendary
Activity: 1153
Merit: 1000
November 26, 2013, 12:57:31 PM
#17
The 10k pizza guy could have gone crazy if he kept thinking about it - so you should mentally freeze the current value of any spent coins at the time of purchase. But they won't believe you anyway, so let them figure it out the hard way Smiley

The 10K pizza guy is mentioned a lot. There are 2 ways he could choose to look at it:

The first way is to see that purchase as the first BTC transaction to enable and get the market going. By making that purchase he started a process that made his other previously worthless coins skyrocket in value.
The second way is to forever fret about how many millions he lost out on.

Hopefully he looks at it the first way. BTW I assume whoever he is still probably has several 10K other coins and has done very well regardless. Remember that pizza transaction happened in the very very early days.
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1010
Borsche
November 26, 2013, 11:58:33 AM
#16

you are getting it wrong.

that bike was maybe 3000 dollars regular. you bought it with your 2011 coins so it cost you 96 $  Grin

don´t punch your calculator keys with figures about what you could have kept. rather be thankful that you had the brains to get into bitcoin at all. be proud !
rather be happy about all those coins you still have.

Yep thats the way. I am amazed every time I pay for something with some tiny fraction of a coin, a coin like many that I've given away to friends as a small gift only a year ago Smiley The 10k pizza guy could have gone crazy if he kept thinking about it - so you should mentally freeze the current value of any spent coins at the time of purchase. But they won't believe you anyway, so let them figure it out the hard way Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1904
Merit: 1002
November 26, 2013, 11:44:12 AM
#15
0 expenses?

What do you call the 3600+ BTC being introduced by the miners every day.  Yes, this is negligible in the long run, but currently it is a significant expense.  At $800, that is $2.88 million a day.  At 10X $800, it would be $28.8 million per day.
hero member
Activity: 812
Merit: 587
Space Lord
November 26, 2013, 08:58:49 AM
#14
I've personally bought a lot of stuff with Bitcoin, and not sorry for it. Grin

Bought some stuff as well, also not sorry, but you can't help but go: "Wow, that bike I bought is now a 80000$ bike" ^^

I have two $1300 Raspberry Pis Cheesy
member
Activity: 79
Merit: 10
November 26, 2013, 06:57:11 AM
#13
I've personally bought a lot of stuff with Bitcoin, and not sorry for it. Grin

Bought some stuff as well, also not sorry, but you can't help but go: "Wow, that bike I bought is now a 80000$ bike" ^^
Edit: That bike cost $80,000 only if you didn't replace the btc you used for the purchase. I always make a replacement purchase of btc before spending them.
newbie
Activity: 52
Merit: 0
November 26, 2013, 06:22:43 AM
#12
I bought with it 3D cards at www.snapily.com
and bought earphones at bitcoinstore
full member
Activity: 306
Merit: 100
November 26, 2013, 05:50:30 AM
#11
I've personally bought a lot of stuff with Bitcoin, and not sorry for it. Grin

Bought some stuff as well, also not sorry, but you can't help but go: "Wow, that bike I bought is now a 80000$ bike" ^^


Nope, shares bought at low price with dollar only to spike high later doesnt mean you should not buy stuff with dollars but only buy shares
legendary
Activity: 1246
Merit: 1000
November 26, 2013, 05:39:14 AM
#10

Op you bought something with btc ?


Does it really matter? I am very satisfied with "store of value" aspect of it
in that it's not inflatable nor can it be confiscated.

Very true. It's superior in almost every single way to gold as a store of value. And gold market cap is about $8 trillion or more, I see no reason why bitcoin won't be able to reach that in the future.
legendary
Activity: 2338
Merit: 2106
November 26, 2013, 05:38:55 AM
#9
I've personally bought a lot of stuff with Bitcoin, and not sorry for it. Grin

Bought some stuff as well, also not sorry, but you can't help but go: "Wow, that bike I bought is now a 80000$ bike" ^^
This is the path to insanity, I'm struggling with it myself  Angry

you are getting it wrong.

that bike was maybe 3000 dollars regular. you bought it with your 2011 coins so it cost you 96 $  Grin

don´t punch your calculator keys with figures about what you could have kept. rather be thankful that you had the brains to get into bitcoin at all. be proud !
rather be happy about all those coins you still have.
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
November 26, 2013, 05:38:19 AM
#8

Op you bought something with btc ?


Does it really matter? I am very satisfied with "store of value" aspect of it
in that it's not inflatable nor can it be confiscated.

Keep in mind, that btc has no "store of value" aspect if you can't use it as a currency. If you can use it as a currency you can use it as a currency and a "store of value" as well. If you can't use it as a currency you won't have a safe "value storage".
Most people "satisfied with the store of value aspect" are in because they got or hope to get rich very fast, which is ok, but is shortviewed. If btc isn't used as a currency it will be another "new tech" bubble which made a few rich but didn't help as neither a new currency nor a value storage.

Quote
Bought some stuff as well, also not sorry, but you can't help but go: "Wow, that bike I bought is now a 80000$ bike" ^^
This is why I try to buy everything with bitcoins and at the same time buy me new bitcoins for the same price.
full member
Activity: 219
Merit: 106
November 26, 2013, 05:29:10 AM
#7
I've personally bought a lot of stuff with Bitcoin, and not sorry for it. Grin

Bought some stuff as well, also not sorry, but you can't help but go: "Wow, that bike I bought is now a 80000$ bike" ^^
This is the path to insanity, I'm struggling with it myself  Angry
sr. member
Activity: 308
Merit: 250
November 26, 2013, 05:27:30 AM
#6
I've personally bought a lot of stuff with Bitcoin, and not sorry for it. Grin

Bought some stuff as well, also not sorry, but you can't help but go: "Wow, that bike I bought is now a 80000$ bike" ^^
hero member
Activity: 812
Merit: 587
Space Lord
November 26, 2013, 05:09:26 AM
#5
I've personally bought a lot of stuff with Bitcoin, and not sorry for it. Grin
legendary
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1003
November 26, 2013, 05:01:02 AM
#4
Quote
The bitcoin is not a bank. It's a new economy

It's a new economy that you have never used to buy anything?  It's a commodity, and a very volatile one at that.
Until it has uses it will be almost all speculation and the bigger fool setting the price.  I hope soon it is accepted as a currency.
Pages:
Jump to: