$1000 Litecoin!!!

yea it does, but how would you know?

Lol.. okay, my bad.. let's step back from the name calling.

But come on man.. You honestly would compare where digital currencies are right now with the "height of the rebills"? No way man.. just no way..

Im just a little surprised that so many in this forum doubt the significance of this.. digital music and books had quite the impact.. can you imagine the effects of digital currency?
 


Lol.. okay, my bad.. let's step back from the name calling.

But come on man.. You honestly would compare where digital currencies are right now with the "height of the rebills"? No way man.. just no way..

Im just a little surprised that so many in this forum doubt the significance of this.. digital music and books had quite the impact.. can you imagine the effects of digital currency?

no, i said if you think coins get big, you shouldnt buy coins, you should run your own, or a company that provides a peripheral service. what you took away from my post was the hyperbole that was meant to illustrate the point.
 
Crypt-currency is basically the online equivalent of cash transactions. If I go buy a new laptop in cash, I don't need to verify the purchase with some other company, who I have to provide photo ID & utility bill to, sign agreements saying I'm not a money laundering terrorist, and hope they let me buy my laptop without restricting my account. Instead, I just open my wallet, hand them cash, no questions asked, and 10 mins later I'm walking out with a smile and new laptop in hand.


This is one of the big things I like about it. It's nice and simple - you pay, you get your stuff, that's it.

Credit cards are a pain in the ass: sometimes they're randomly declined, sometimes the merchant has such strict fraud controls that they're declined for missing a period in the address, merchants charge more for products due to extraneously high fees, nobody really knows how they work (ex. Amex's "instead of a spending limit, we have a spending suggestion" I've had Amex for a long time and still have no idea what the fuck that means or what my limit is), merchants rejecting high-dollar transactions due to possible fraud, and so on.

Whereas with bitcoin - you pay, you get your stuff. Can't be much simpler than that.
 
This domain just went live: Bitcoins.com

It's owned by MtGox and it's surprisingly not at all spammy. I think they did a fair job at explaining and made a good decision to not be overly self promotional, but instead, promote the product that their service is built around.
 
Interesting is the buy amount of LTC on btc-e.

The buy amount in $ reached last week the btc level and is now at $6.5 million. Btc stagnates around $5 million. Which mean that since some days more money goes in LTC as in BTC and from BTC view LTC draws 25-30% more real money in the coin as BTC.

BTC stays on $1000 and is rising slow but on a somewhat low trading level. Which is, when you compare it to other stocks & exchanges, a normal behaviour at some point.
 
Interesting is the buy amount of LTC on btc-e.

The buy amount in $ reached last week the btc level and is now at $6.5 million. Btc stagnates around $5 million. Which mean that since some days more money goes in LTC as in BTC and from BTC view LTC draws 25-30% more real money in the coin as BTC.

BTC stays on $1000 and is rising slow but on a somewhat low trading level. Which is, when you compare it to other stocks & exchanges, a normal behaviour at some point.

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cNEXzY5zzm0]KITTY CANDY - YouTube[/ame]