top | item 27337249 (no title) djmashko2 | 4 years ago I'd be interested in seeing this exam! discuss order hn newest knorker|4 years ago You won't, because then it'll turn out to be nonsense.This is always how cryptocoin nuts argue. baby|4 years ago What is the maximum throughput (tx/s) that some systems can achieve?Do you really need to go through all the history of the system in order to be convinced of the latest state?What are the different ways to decide who should be the next person that gets to choose the next block of transactions?Can you hide the amount you’re sending? What about the recipient? Or your own identity?Can you transfer bitcoin into ethereum or more generally one cryptocurrency into another?Is it possible to send funds to a recognizable shortname instead of an hexadecimal string?Are there ways to protect your funds with several keys instead of a single one? bussierem|4 years ago - Literally a google search for that + bitcoin gave me the answer- No- Another google search for "bitcoin + <your question>"- "Yes" for literally the rest of the questions.This wasn't an exam, this was basically an advertisement for "look what cool things you can do with this"If I got any wrong, whatever. I have literally never researched bitcoin or blockchain. If I got them right, well... nice try on the exam I guess. load replies (2)
knorker|4 years ago You won't, because then it'll turn out to be nonsense.This is always how cryptocoin nuts argue.
baby|4 years ago What is the maximum throughput (tx/s) that some systems can achieve?Do you really need to go through all the history of the system in order to be convinced of the latest state?What are the different ways to decide who should be the next person that gets to choose the next block of transactions?Can you hide the amount you’re sending? What about the recipient? Or your own identity?Can you transfer bitcoin into ethereum or more generally one cryptocurrency into another?Is it possible to send funds to a recognizable shortname instead of an hexadecimal string?Are there ways to protect your funds with several keys instead of a single one? bussierem|4 years ago - Literally a google search for that + bitcoin gave me the answer- No- Another google search for "bitcoin + <your question>"- "Yes" for literally the rest of the questions.This wasn't an exam, this was basically an advertisement for "look what cool things you can do with this"If I got any wrong, whatever. I have literally never researched bitcoin or blockchain. If I got them right, well... nice try on the exam I guess. load replies (2)
bussierem|4 years ago - Literally a google search for that + bitcoin gave me the answer- No- Another google search for "bitcoin + <your question>"- "Yes" for literally the rest of the questions.This wasn't an exam, this was basically an advertisement for "look what cool things you can do with this"If I got any wrong, whatever. I have literally never researched bitcoin or blockchain. If I got them right, well... nice try on the exam I guess. load replies (2)
knorker|4 years ago
This is always how cryptocoin nuts argue.
baby|4 years ago
Do you really need to go through all the history of the system in order to be convinced of the latest state?
What are the different ways to decide who should be the next person that gets to choose the next block of transactions?
Can you hide the amount you’re sending? What about the recipient? Or your own identity?
Can you transfer bitcoin into ethereum or more generally one cryptocurrency into another?
Is it possible to send funds to a recognizable shortname instead of an hexadecimal string?
Are there ways to protect your funds with several keys instead of a single one?
bussierem|4 years ago
- No
- Another google search for "bitcoin + <your question>"
- "Yes" for literally the rest of the questions.
This wasn't an exam, this was basically an advertisement for "look what cool things you can do with this"
If I got any wrong, whatever. I have literally never researched bitcoin or blockchain. If I got them right, well... nice try on the exam I guess.