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Topic: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion - page 22753. (Read 26714912 times)

legendary
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1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
legendary
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#1 VIP Crypto Casino
The great BTC bullrun of 2015 is set to begin?
legendary
Activity: 1624
Merit: 1008

My, nerves are badly exposed here.  

I though that it was people buying that made price to go up.  Sorry for the stupidity.  What is the real cause? the Mystic Vital Force of the Triangular Fibonacci Retracements, or whatever?

The giveout was only 10'000 BTC total and spread out in time.  This jump was too sharp to be that.

Could it be Gavin's tweet?  It seems that many people read it as some breaktrough that would boost the block rate 60x and/or solve the problems of 20 MB blocks.


I was yanking your chain Jorge...

However I do believe all of the people on my list , are well how can I put this....... people?

I never said people do not buy now did I Jorge?

It could have been Kimmy, or, it could have been one of the other 7 billion people on the planet.... just maybe but do not quote me on that.


(edit- Jorge, it could have been someone that really wanted 50K of bitcoins, and has been waiting for a moment to buy, and has decided for various reasons, this was the moment he/she/they were waiting for, and so they bought, it may even happen again)

I guess they don't care that 50K is up for auction soon.

And here I thought I didn't need to be checking prices this week.  I don't have alarms set Grin
legendary
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Any other Brits on here?
legendary
Activity: 1078
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The matrix has shifted.  Can anyone else feel it?



In the UK we call this "sunshine"

(little joke that anyone in the UK will get today)
hero member
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Merit: 500
Ultranode
full member
Activity: 131
Merit: 100

Also can't read much of code but, larger block size is a GOOd thing. Why? more hashed information per unit block. Not just for bitcoin transactions, but for any information to be stored in a block and validated by the network. Can't you see why this is a good thing? bitcoin blocks can be used for more thanjust bitcoin transactions. good thing in my books.

The blockchain is already what? 30Gigs? 40gigs?  That's a lot of storage and a lot of bandwidth. If you were to increase the size of the blocks it will become very costly for individuals to run full nodes, leading to centralization.

Also removes the idea of scarcity in the block. To maintain the incentive for the miners is to maintain the security of the blockchain. Once the reward gets cut down it is imagined that the fees will replace this incentive. Scarcity and an open market fee structure would hopefully provide enough incentive to keep the miners interested.

I'm not fully on the side of either camp just yet, any changes (or stubborn refusal to change) could result in unintended consequences. I'm just saying we should tread lightly.

Just because the block size is 20 MB doesn't mean they will be full at the time. Even with the current limit 1 MB hardly ever hit.

Bandwith and storage are getting cheaper as time goes on.

+1. i expect that technology will scale more quickly than the blockchain.

you can buy a 1TB harddrive for $50 (or a 128GB SSD for $100), and >2MB/s bandwith is pretty common now in major cities.
in 2-3 years from now youll buy a 1TB SSD for $100, and the majority of people in developed countries will have access to 5MB/s or better, with major cities having 10-20MB/s

Ps: i recently moved my blockchain files from my 128GB SSD to an HDD, and was shocked how much longer loading bitcoin-qt took. It went from being about 40-60 second loadtime to 3-4 minutes. SSD drives are the future, and will make read/write/storage of the blockchain quick and simple



SSD's are also actually cheaper to produce than HDD's, we are just paying premiums for them for obvious reasons. You can already get 1TB MSATA SSD's, so the tech is definitely there already to fit 4TB within a 2.5" enclosure. It won't be long until a 4TB, 2.5" SSD will sell for under $100. By the time the blockchain hits 4TB, we may even have quantum storage lol.
legendary
Activity: 947
Merit: 1008
central banking = outdated protocol
The matrix has shifted.  Can anyone else feel it?



Something feels much different.
legendary
Activity: 947
Merit: 1008
central banking = outdated protocol
Uh Oh bears!

LOLZ at the ones cheering the dumps on Feb22

newbie
Activity: 11
Merit: 0
The matrix has shifted.  Can anyone else feel it?

legendary
Activity: 2128
Merit: 1005
ASIC Wannabe

Also can't read much of code but, larger block size is a GOOd thing. Why? more hashed information per unit block. Not just for bitcoin transactions, but for any information to be stored in a block and validated by the network. Can't you see why this is a good thing? bitcoin blocks can be used for more thanjust bitcoin transactions. good thing in my books.

The blockchain is already what? 30Gigs? 40gigs?  That's a lot of storage and a lot of bandwidth. If you were to increase the size of the blocks it will become very costly for individuals to run full nodes, leading to centralization.

Also removes the idea of scarcity in the block. To maintain the incentive for the miners is to maintain the security of the blockchain. Once the reward gets cut down it is imagined that the fees will replace this incentive. Scarcity and an open market fee structure would hopefully provide enough incentive to keep the miners interested.

I'm not fully on the side of either camp just yet, any changes (or stubborn refusal to change) could result in unintended consequences. I'm just saying we should tread lightly.

Just because the block size is 20 MB doesn't mean they will be full at the time. Even with the current limit 1 MB hardly ever hit.

Bandwith and storage are getting cheaper as time goes on.

+1. i expect that technology will scale more quickly than the blockchain.

you can buy a 1TB harddrive for $50 (or a 128GB SSD for $100), and >2MB/s bandwith is pretty common now in major cities.
in 2-3 years from now youll buy a 1TB SSD for $100, and the majority of people in developed countries will have access to 5MB/s or better, with major cities having 10-20MB/s

Ps: i recently moved my blockchain files from my 128GB SSD to an HDD, and was shocked how much longer loading bitcoin-qt took. It went from being about 40-60 second loadtime to 3-4 minutes. SSD drives are the future, and will make read/write/storage of the blockchain quick and simple

member
Activity: 93
Merit: 10
Quote from: NotLambchop link=topic=178336.msg10600351#msg10600351


Crippling regret  Cheesy


legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1441
...
The blockchain is already what? 30Gigs? 40gigs?  That's a lot of storage and a lot of bandwidth. If you were to increase the size of the blocks it will become very costly for individuals to run full nodes, leading to centralization...

If we end up not liking it, we can always change it back.  Just like the 21 million coin limit Smiley

That was cruel.  Cheesy

Yeah... try that.

 
legendary
Activity: 947
Merit: 1008
central banking = outdated protocol

Please don't take it the wrong way.

Wouldn't dream of it friend!

hero member
Activity: 910
Merit: 1003
...
The blockchain is already what? 30Gigs? 40gigs?  That's a lot of storage and a lot of bandwidth. If you were to increase the size of the blocks it will become very costly for individuals to run full nodes, leading to centralization...

If we end up not liking it, we can always change it back.  Just like the 21 million coin limit Smiley

That was cruel.  Cheesy
hero member
Activity: 910
Merit: 1003
It is the upper limit, not the block size itself being increased. Block size increases when the transaction increases. Without a proper upper limit, some day no one can send or receive BTC.

IIRC, someone objected that it would become an advantage for a miner to assemble empty or very short blocks, because that would give him an edge over miners who work on full 20 MB blocks (which would take significantly longer to propagate).  Thus there was a proposal to force all blocks to be 20 MB long, irrespective of their actual contents.  Does it make sense?
sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 254
sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 254
...
The blockchain is already what? 30Gigs? 40gigs?  That's a lot of storage and a lot of bandwidth. If you were to increase the size of the blocks it will become very costly for individuals to run full nodes, leading to centralization...

If we end up not liking it, we can always change it back.  Just like the 21 million coin limit Smiley
legendary
Activity: 947
Merit: 1008
central banking = outdated protocol
Clearly this is GENTLEMEN!


legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1441

Also can't read much of code but, larger block size is a GOOd thing. Why? more hashed information per unit block. Not just for bitcoin transactions, but for any information to be stored in a block and validated by the network. Can't you see why this is a good thing? bitcoin blocks can be used for more thanjust bitcoin transactions. good thing in my books.

The blockchain is already what? 30Gigs? 40gigs?  That's a lot of storage and a lot of bandwidth. If you were to increase the size of the blocks it will become very costly for individuals to run full nodes, leading to centralization.

Also removes the idea of scarcity in the block. To maintain the incentive for the miners is to maintain the security of the blockchain. Once the reward gets cut down it is imagined that the fees will replace this incentive. Scarcity and an open market fee structure would hopefully provide enough incentive to keep the miners interested.

I'm not fully on the side of either camp just yet, any changes (or stubborn refusal to change) could result in unintended consequences. I'm just saying we should tread lightly.

The cost of storage and bandwidth is falling per fixed dollar at an exponential rate (on a yearly -18 months basis)
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