All posts made by solracx in Bitcointalk.org's Wall Observer thread



1. Post 3579090 (copy this link) (by solracx) (scraped on 2020-04-04_Sat_11.23h):

Quote from: MickeyT2008 on November 14, 2013, 10:57:26 AM
Likely the same API issue they've had in the past, because Bitstamp puts a limit on the number of API calls and then they ban you.

They should run their public API calls locally at a refresh interval and then cache them with their CDN. I don't know what's so hard, but that might just be me. Their current API setup is very unprofessional.

Well, that's still the problem with many Bitcoin services: they've gotten overrun by bitcoin's and their own success and they're struggling now to scale their technology to an adequate level quickly...
 

Yeah, imagine the fun when the reality that Bitcoin doesn't scale finally hits home.
Not to mention all the money that's been put into mining.  It doesn't matter how fast everyone mines or how much they've spent on it, they're still only going to get 25BTC every ten minutes between them.

A lot of miners who purchased the latest 28nm are in for a rude awakening.  There is no way they can recover the Bitcoin equivalent of their purchase price.  They will be lucky to recover even the USD equivalent of the purchase price.



2. Post 3579150 (copy this link) (by solracx) (scraped on 2020-04-04_Sat_11.23h):

Quote from: notthematrix on November 14, 2013, 01:52:39 AM
$449 will be the crash.  It's the next prime number.  Big psychological barrier, especially with the nerdier crowd.

Chineese nerds , read diffrent signs like 2650 Tongue


Good point about the Chinese seeing a different number!   Levels like 300, 350, 400 etc.  don't have meaning when likely 1/2 of all trading is looking at a different number!!



3. Post 3579194 (copy this link) (by solracx) (scraped on 2020-04-04_Sat_11.23h):

Folks!

We've all made a killing trading Bitcoin.

If you believe in Karma (or not), please donate a fraction of a Bitcoin to help the unfortunate victims of typhoon Haiyan.

Read:  http://money.cnn.com/2013/11/13/investing/bitcoins-philippines-typhoon-donations/

Enough fractions of a Bitcoin with enough donors can make a big difference.

Giving like this helps build up the reputation of Bitcoin.

Thanks!!



4. Post 3579212 (copy this link) (by solracx) (scraped on 2020-04-04_Sat_11.23h):

Quote from: MickeyT2008 on November 14, 2013, 11:07:26 AM
Likely the same API issue they've had in the past, because Bitstamp puts a limit on the number of API calls and then they ban you.

They should run their public API calls locally at a refresh interval and then cache them with their CDN. I don't know what's so hard, but that might just be me. Their current API setup is very unprofessional.

Well, that's still the problem with many Bitcoin services: they've gotten overrun by bitcoin's and their own success and they're struggling now to scale their technology to an adequate level quickly...
 

Yeah, imagine the fun when the reality that Bitcoin doesn't scale finally hits home.
Not to mention all the money that's been put into mining.  It doesn't matter how fast everyone mines or how much they've spent on it, they're still only going to get 25BTC every ten minutes between them.

A lot of miners who purchased the latest 28nm are in for a rude awakening.  There is no way they can recover the Bitcoin equivalent of their purchase price.  They will be lucky to recover even the USD equivalent of the purchase price.
They're probably in for a rude awakening on account of having done business with BFL, they'll be lucky to get their Monarch cards before the last bitcoin is mined if BFL's history is anything to go by.

I made the mistake of ordering one of their 7GH/s miners.  I'd still be waiting for it now if I hadn't changed it to hosted mining, and I only did that because it wouldn't have even covered the cost of its own electricity, this way BFL have to pay the electricity bill and I don't have to pay import duty so at least I shouldn't make even more of a loss.  I only did that because the bastards refused to refund me after they delayed so much that it was worthless.  Well, I won't be making that mistake again, bye bye bitcoins.  I feel sorry for those who've given thousands to BFL, at least my loss wasn't that much.

If you assume a timely delivery of product, the best one can recover in USD is about 75% of the purchase price.

if a delivery is delayed by a month (considering the rise in difficulty), the buyer may be able to recover at best 30% of the purchase price.



5. Post 3579224 (copy this link) (by solracx) (scraped on 2020-04-04_Sat_11.23h):

Quote from: NewLiberty on November 14, 2013, 03:25:32 AM
there's never been a bubble, just large holders dumping to accumulate more and scaring people away for a while..


+1 And it will happen again after the US decides on its digital currency regulatory policies on the 18th of this month. The news will create more questions than it will provide answers, giving the perfect opportunity to induce some panic into the public.

*edit There HAVE been bubbles in the past, but this likely is not one of them... yet

China , brasil , india , Iran , etc do not care about some pitty US rules.
Even germany will not care.
The $ is done and the world knows it Smiley


LOL even us here in California don't care!!! "rules"  hahahaa   Grin

Capital controls tend to increase the price.  Just look at China... and Gox.   Undecided

That is a correct observation.  Simple supply and demand.  Kind of like the time of Prohibition in the U.S.



6. Post 3579239 (copy this link) (by solracx) (scraped on 2020-04-04_Sat_11.23h):

Quote from: Its About Sharing on November 14, 2013, 08:02:05 AM
However, this just looks like another mild correction on the way up. I mean, we went up 70 points on Gox in less than 24 hours. There needed to be a correction.
I agree that this does not yet have the feel of a big correction, where bears sort of signal each other with consecutive sales, following an exhaustion of the buyers  at the peak.

We are witnessing price discovery.

BTC is not a stock, it has behaved like one, but what it is, is now being "discovered".

Do not worry about oversold, overbought, MACD crossing, etc.

We are looking at an entity that is a: stock (in a sense, ownership of the network), protocol (to be used for other things as well - e.g. stock ownership, voting, ownership tracking, etc.), a payment system, a currency, an asset (this seems to be primarily how it is viewed right now, commodity, etc.

If we continue to look at it like a singular entity and not the complex... for lack of a better word - digital honey badger that it is, it is going to run and we will still be trying to make sense of the chart. Once we have more data (months to years), then TA will make more sense. Till then, enjoy the ride.



Agree.  Only relevant metric appears to be the difficulty rate changing.   The Blockchained.com charts are the best indicators as to where it is going long term.  Note: some of the charts are logarithmic!!