If it was a 7 for 1 split, that would be around 535M shares, love chain crypto has a total supply of 535M coins. I'm sure some other ape has trouble shot this, but does the NFT need more shares to make it a) a cheaper NFT and b) to last longer?
Nope, just held it during 2017 as it was one of the 'ethereum killers'
I sold it cause there was little adoption same as with other eth killers from 2017
There were several tokens launched but not one of them made it big. I think most successful one was Wagerr but I think they migrated to their own blockchain
I do not think it is a bad project but there are so many different competitors to ETH that it makes it hard to stand out
> BTC has a fixed supply that can't be manipulated by politicians.
But how about all the other cryptocurrencies? I'm sure you know Dogecoin was created as a joke, until credulous crypto "investors" started throwing money into that too.
Think about this. What if there are only so many people willing to put their "fiat currency" into cryptocurrency? They could have put all of the finite amount of money they had into Bitcoin, but now that there are so many other cryptos to put their money in, they spread it around to many different ones.
Maybe governments can't inflate cryptocurrencies, but any jackhole who has an idea and a gimmick to create another one for the pile sure can.
Amway "investors" up the chain lose money when somebody "invests" in Metabolife or Mary Kay instead. If there was only one MLM (or one crypto) that wouldn't happen.
https://www.coinlore.com/token-types/erc20/all
Every token on that list from a wrapped bitcoin to Shib is run through Eth. If any of those can be used for payment it is using Eth
It's not that Eth can't, it's just more valuable when you can wrap in millions of transactions for the cost of a single transaction...
Many exchanges will list coins in categories, but I also like this site:
https://www.coinlore.com/crypto-sectors
It shows a huge number of coins in a variety of groups (did you know that there are Real Estate cryptos?).
The site gives you some good info on the coins, but you should look at their websites/subreddits/other pages before investing anything serious.
>My concern (and it's not very educated so please correct me or help me understand) is that the hash rate seems lower than a lot of other Inferior projects and coins,
I think you are misunderstanding hashrate a little.
Many different coins measure hashrate differently because they have different mining algorithms. For example Bitcoin uses SHA-256, Ethereum uses Dagger Hashimoto, and Zcash uses Equihash.
Hardware that mines Bitcoin is measured in "hash" Where Hardware that mines Zcash is measured in Solutions per Second (Sols/s) . Hardware that can mine Bitcoin cannot mine Zcash and vise versa. So to compare a coins hashrate that is a completely different algo is like comparing an apples and oranges.
If you want to compare Zcashs hashrate "security" then you need to compare it to other coins that use the Equihash algorithm.
What you will find is that Zcash has by far the highest hashrate of any Equihash coin, and is thereby the most secure of them. https://www.coinlore.com/coins/equihash
>Thanks for you answers. I understand that my asic A11 won't be able to mine ethereum. But how about other ethash algorithm cryptos? And will it still be profitable?
Have a look at the size of the other Ethash coins and take a wild guess. ETC isn't even Ethash any more either so no, not even close. Ethash ASICs are going to be literal paperweights after the merge.
https://www.coinlore.com/coins/ethash
Calling an E9 ( 3.00 Gh/s ) useless seeing as at their original price they've all paid themselves off already is a bit of stretch.
As you can see there are still other coins on EThash.
I'm a average income person in a third world country. You don't need to buy lots to participate and have fun with crypto.
https://www.coinlore.com/crypto-sectors
This site might be helpful to you. It displays crypto projects by what function they fulfill. You can have a look and find projects that are interesting to you and that you think could serve an actual purpose in the real world.
I bolded this because a LOT of projects in the crypto space exist mainly to make money. Number go up. Woo woo.
But there are a few with real-world plans and functionality, and I think those are the interesting ones to look at.
Ethereum is the big hot one at the moment, but it has a huge problem with fees. Eth 2.0 is coming next year to make it feeless, but it has been postponed many times already, so people aren't 100% sure if it can arrive.
The reason I like Nano so much is that it solves a real world problem: banking the unbanked. It gives the ability to anyone with a smartphone to manage their finances, wherever they live. Many people don't have access to traditional banking systems, so Nano can help them. In addition to that, it makes international payments free and instant. I often receive money from abroad and it always sucks to pay fees. nano is feeless, anywhere in the world.
Natrium is just a wallet to send/receive NANO, not for buying. You’ll need to buy on a crypto exchange. Coinlore and other coin tracking websites list from which exchanges you can buy NANO from. The exchanges you can create an account for depends on where you’re located. US for example has some restrictions particularly for certain states.
I personally use Binance and AnchorUSD, although I cannot recommend the latter at the moment (issues with funds not posting, withdrawals delayed, probably because of the large influx of new users).
You can buy DOGE on the following exchanges:
https://www.coinlore.com/coin/dogecoin/exchanges
I would however recommend you (as you say that you are new to the cryptocurrency world) to buy more established currencies as BTC and ETH first, as they are more predictable.
DOGE is being hyped right now but way less established in the crypto world and therefore also less predictable and stable.
In the end it all boils down to your personal preference and risk tolerance.
Binance.US, Kraken, Bittrex, just to name a few. https://www.coinlore.com/coin/dogecoin/exchanges
Full disclosure, this is not financial advice, and please understand how valuable Bitcoin is compared to Dogecoin before investing during an unprecedented bull market
Did you add the assembly reference itself (not the using
directive, but actually adding the reference itself?)
That aside, you don't actually want to scrape this data if you can help it. It looks like that site provides a data API: https://www.coinlore.com/cryptocurrency-data-api
That's going to be far easier to interact with; you don't need HtmlAgilityPack at all; just HttpClient.