tech/a
No Ordinary Duck
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- 14 October 2004
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Banks are trialing ripple technology. Not the actual xrp, so I am told.
Wow, Aussie banks move so fast, Pay Pal have been doing this for years.The Banks and Reserve Bank are trailing something.
http://www.theage.com.au/business/b...d-to-gather-pace-in-2018-20171222-p4yy03.html
Speaking of Paypal.Wow, Aussie banks move so fast, Pay Pal have been doing this for years.
Wow, Aussie banks move so fast, Pay Pal have been doing this for years.
The system will also allow people to link bank accounts to phone numbers or email addresses, removing the need to enter a BSB or account number when transferring money.
Few questions to be asked, that those in Aus haven't had to ask but others have (Greece, Cyprus, Argentina, Venezuela).. For some the answer to the questions can be Bitcoin:
1 - What IS the plastic in my wallet (or more importantly now - on the computer)?
2 - What is the impact of all this on 'money' (money printing / negative interest rates / central bank competition to devalue their currencies)?
3 - If the US government is 'backing' the USD - can they actually do it, or have they made too many promises ($20T in debt, $80T++ in other liabilities and ongoing budget deficits)?
4 - The answer to the above used to be Gold/Silver/Sea Shells, but is there another 'store of value' which is better (limited number, easily transferable, portable, divisible, secure, not 'backed' by anything - like gold)?
If Bitcoin is 'better' in this capacity than Gold, then could it be worth as much as gold eventually ($2T ish for existing mined gold)? Until (big IF) Bitcoin gets to universal acceptance like gold has - the price is going to be volatile as people try to figure out what it is actually worth.
EVEN IF we think that the crypto space is a bubble, consider:
- That the 2000 stock bubble peaked at about $3T before it popped vs cryptos at approx $600T.
- That wall street hasn't dramatically moved in yet, how many people own a crypto ETF in their super fund?
- That governments haven't moved in yet and are beginning to build rules around it (ie tax rulings) which may imply acceptance
* Agree the price of other cryptos are bubbly - as some of the use cases don't either make business sense or have no 'moat' that you'd traditionally talk about with shares. Also they are open source so easily replicated where projects are profitable (so generate increased competition). Bitcoin does have some issues which need to be resolved (transaction cost / transaction time / PoS vs PoW) but has significant advantage as the first mover (a lot of people now know about Bitcoin and maybe Ethereum/Ripple, but couldn't name any others)
The Banks and Reserve Bank are trailing something.
If Bitcoin is 'better' in this capacity than Gold, then could it be worth as much as gold eventually ($2T ish for existing mined gold)? Until (big IF) Bitcoin gets to universal acceptance like gold has - the price is going to be volatile as people try to figure out what it is actually worth.
Few questions to be asked, that those in Aus haven't had to ask but others have (Greece, Cyprus, Argentina, Venezuela).. For some the answer to the questions can be Bitcoin:
1 - What IS the plastic in my wallet (or more importantly now - on the computer)?
2 - What is the impact of all this on 'money' (money printing / negative interest rates / central bank competition to devalue their currencies)?
3 - If the US government is 'backing' the USD - can they actually do it, or have they made too many promises ($20T in debt, $80T++ in other liabilities and ongoing budget deficits)?
4 - The answer to the above used to be Gold/Silver/Sea Shells, but is there another 'store of value' which is better (limited number, easily transferable, portable, divisible, secure, not 'backed' by anything - like gold)?
If Bitcoin is 'better' in this capacity than Gold, then could it be worth as much as gold eventually ($2T ish for existing mined gold)? Until (big IF) Bitcoin gets to universal acceptance like gold has - the price is going to be volatile as people try to figure out what it is actually worth.
EVEN IF we think that the crypto space is a bubble, consider:
- That the 2000 stock bubble peaked at about $3T before it popped vs cryptos at approx $600T.
- That wall street hasn't dramatically moved in yet, how many people own a crypto ETF in their super fund?
- That governments haven't moved in yet and are beginning to build rules around it (ie tax rulings) which may imply acceptance
* Agree the price of other cryptos are bubbly - as some of the use cases don't either make business sense or have no 'moat' that you'd traditionally talk about with shares. Also they are open source so easily replicated where projects are profitable (so generate increased competition). Bitcoin does have some issues which need to be resolved (transaction cost / transaction time / PoS vs PoW) but has significant advantage as the first mover (a lot of people now know about Bitcoin and maybe Ethereum/Ripple, but couldn't name any others)
It won’t be long and Govts are likely to link currency to a
Blockchain or Blockchain like technology
It could be and it may not be.
The basis of Cryptocurrency is here to stay.
It’s being adopted by banks and financial institutions
It won’t be long and Govts are likely to link currency to a
Blockchain or Blockchain like technology
There are already variants and lots of them each with their
Own positives and negatives being traded.
As I’ve said before Bitcoin could just become a commodity at a value
Which funds can be parked and liquidated if required.
Tulips are here to stay also, they are pretty and smell nice, and hobbyists like to garden with them, but they aren’t worth the price they once spiked to when they first became super popular.
Back then the world was flat
The Sun revolved around the earth and
You got around on a horse.
The gold standard wasn't known nor the Fiat system.
Think you'll agree that the world and its technologies are vastly different.
You may not agree that Bitcoins and Tulips are Flat earth and round.
I think we haven't seen the end to the highs seen with Bitcoin.
But as you know my money is on others.
So far the Bloom is brilliant.
Bubbles are awesome.Nope, the earth had been proven to be round about 1000 years before the tulip bubble.
But yes tech has advanced, but human nature remains the same, we haven’t as a species yet unhooked our selves from our capability to invent bubbles.
Good luck with it, it will be great until it’s not.
I sold out half the other day. My initial investment was a couple thousand and take was in the hundreds of thousands.Well then jump on some AI stocks, cause your involuntarily calling this a bubble whilst staying on it which kind of indicates an implosion is nigh!
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