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Bitcoin- A 10 Bagger (BTC)     

Martini - 02 Aug 2017 19:46

<a href=Bitcoin_001photo gallery online" alt="" />

Bitcoin FAQs

Back in 2014 I started hearing about Bitcoin and being inquisitive I researched it and found out how to buy some, which I did. I then promptly ignored them and carried on with my fumbling attempts to make money out of other things.

In fact, I couldn’t remember what my details were and how to access them.

Whilst clearing out some old paper work recently I stumbled across where I had written down my account details, so I logged into Blockchain and my bitcoins where still there and what was more pleasing I was sat on a 10 bagger.

Now at this point you are probably thinking “Smug Bastard” but no I was kicking myself.

At the time, I purchased I had thought “What am I going to do with them and they will probably go belly up as a scam and I only bought 0.1 bitcoins. Yes, I risked a massive £21 which is now worth £210 as I type.

So, I am now sitting thinking why didn’t you buy 1 or 5 or 10 for God’s sake it would not have broken you at the time.

So Doh! This making money game is easy when looking through a rear-view mirror.

I will hang on to my small stake and maybe it will 10 bagger again and I still don’t know what to do with them, but things are changing.
M

skinny - 29 Nov 2017 13:34 - 36 of 142

Martini - a deci-bitcoinaire!

HARRYCAT - 29 Nov 2017 13:38 - 37 of 142

Cheers hilary. I think I will wait for the next fad!.....not feeling bitter or anything like that!!

hilary - 29 Nov 2017 13:40 - 38 of 142

Waiting for the day they accept them in Volg.

HARRYCAT - 29 Nov 2017 13:45 - 39 of 142

Blimey. Is that the Swiss equivalent of Lidl?......Peckham seems eons ago!

kimoldfield - 29 Nov 2017 17:39 - 42 of 142

Can I buy 0.000000000000000000001 of a bitcoin with the old £1 coin I have just found?

kimoldfield - 29 Nov 2017 17:40 - 43 of 142

Oops! Sorry! I missed a nought, so that's 0.0000000000000000000001.😃

Martini - 29 Nov 2017 20:36 - 44 of 142

One hairy day. People burned profts made!

<a href=29_11_2017" alt="" />

hilary - 30 Nov 2017 08:06 - 45 of 142

kim,

Bitcoin only works to an eight decimal fraction system, however, £1 should buy you approximately 0.000125BTC.

Martini,

There are so many things I don't understand about Bitcoin....

Once the 21 millionth Bitcoin has been minted, and the plates self-destruct, surely the value of a Bitcoin will only be the value of the net tangible assets of the issuer at that point in time, divided by the number of coins in circulation (21m)? Given their revenue stream will dry up at that point, and the issuer will presumably still have ongoing liabilities above and beyond those required to dissolve the currency, then the value of each coin will fall continually?

HARRYCAT - 30 Nov 2017 09:40 - 46 of 142

"Minting.....plates".....that is soooooo last century! ;o)
Surely Bitcoin was designed as a means of trading in goods and services, not as a binary investment, so Bitcoin should remain as trading means, albeit at a lower value? Any currency has a finite amount in circulation?

hilary - 30 Nov 2017 10:10 - 47 of 142

Harry,

New Bitcoin will continue to be minted virtually and issued until 2033, albeit the rate of issue is continually slowing. I presume that increasing demand and slowing supply is what's driving the price now.

And yes, you're right, crypto currencies were primarily designed as a means of trading goods and services (although I don't understand what was ever wrong with sterling, dollars, euros and yen). However, physical currencies are supported by a central bank who acts as a lender of last resort. What happens when people realise that the issuers of crypto currencies don't have the means to support all of the virtual coins that they've minted?

hilary - 30 Nov 2017 10:16 - 48 of 142

skinny - 30 Nov 2017 10:18 - 49 of 142

giphy.gifmain-qimg-f8b0e3b5a495cd5dd96ab310c15d4a

hilary - 30 Nov 2017 10:32 - 50 of 142

Dil - 30 Nov 2017 10:38 - 51 of 142

Nearly a four bagger since u started the thread 4 months ago M , can't be much else that has done that.

Must admit I know nothing about bit coins and so don't understand the rise. What can you do with them ?

HARRYCAT - 30 Nov 2017 10:47 - 52 of 142

Buy suitcases full of white powder?

Dil - 30 Nov 2017 11:14 - 53 of 142

Yep just did a bit of research and am now a bit suspicious of why Martini had some in the first place. Understood the bit about the Silk Road currency but lost the plot after that.

skinny - 30 Nov 2017 11:35 - 54 of 142

Do these qualify?

pound-coin-cut-in-half.jpgtApVUnG.jpg

ExecLine - 30 Nov 2017 12:37 - 55 of 142

New sets of transactions (blocks) are added to Bitcoin’s blockchain roughly every 10 minutes by so-called 'miners'.

While working on the blockchain these miners aren’t required to trust each other. The only thing miners have to trust is the code that runs Bitcoin.

The code includes several rules to validate new transactions.

For example, a transaction can only be valid if the sender actually owns the sent amount. Every miner individually confirms whether transactions adhere to these rules, eliminating the need to trust other miners.

There's a lot more about this stuff at:

https://digiconomist.net/bitcoin-energy-consumption

The main thing of 'household interest to me' is, that it takes tons and tons and TONS of energy consumption to run the Bitcoin system (which, apart from energy usage levels, is a little bit similar to the VISA payment system).

The thing is though, each Bitcoin transaction uses about 270 KWhrs of electricity - meaning, that just 1 Bitcoin transaction could power the equivalent of around 9 households for 1 day. The annual current estimated electricity consumption for Bitcoin is around 30 TWh

The country currently closest to Bitcoin in energy consumption terms is apparently Morocco.
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