What really sets Feathercoin apart from all other Crypto Currencies?
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I will answer your question with a question. What sets FreeBSD apart from Linux or Perl from Ruby? Does a technical answer really explain why one makes the choices they do? In my experience, no it doesn’t. From a certain altitude and to most people, it’s all the same. Can grandmother tell you the difference between Python and Perl? Not really. It all looks like line noise to her.
For me, CCs are breaking out in a fashion similar to major OSS projects. This should be of no surprise. At the end of the day, which one(s) have a chance of being mainstream - perhaps even the basis for some fairly major commercial applications? Feathercoin feels like one to me.
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Good, question I have been talking to a lot of people recently about Feathercoin, and get asked the same thing. It would be good to have both a technical and a laymans terms answer as these days most people have heard about BTC.
Marked for updates
UM
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[quote name=“estrabd” post=“57130” timestamp=“1391559727”]
I will answer your question with a question. What sets FreeBSD apart from Linux or Perl from Ruby? Does a technical answer really explain why one makes the choices they do? In my experience, no it doesn’t. From a certain altitude and to most people, it’s all the same. Can grandmother tell you the difference between Python and Perl? Not really. It all looks like line noise to her.For me, CCs are breaking out in a fashion similar to major OSS projects. This should be of no surprise. At the end of the day, which one(s) have a chance of being mainstream - perhaps even the basis for some fairly major commercial applications? Feathercoin feels like one to me.
[/quote]Well then I should just tell people it’s just another alt currency, they are all basically the same, and you wouldn’t understand anyway?
I think your very wrong, it makes a really big difference to me. When I read about dogecoins, I am not really all that interested, but when I read about mastercoin and open transactions (I know not a coin) I get really interested, because they both offer advancements on what the bitcoin blockchain has started. They both have hugh implications in how the world will now change. So what people (note: I did not say speculators) ask “what does feathercoin bring to the future table?” I would love to be able to say “feathercoin is unique in that it offers xyz benefit that will enhance the way we do xxx in the future in new and wonderful ways”
What I am looking for is for someone with more intimate details of how feathercoin works to fill in those blanks for me. From my experience talking with others, they want to know the same thing. Why should I choose feathercoin over xyzcoin?? is a question I get a lot. If someone asks me that about litecoin or mastercoin I can give them a good solid answer!
[quote author=uncle_muddy link=topic=7426.msg57132#msg57132 date=1391560728]
Good, question I have been talking to a lot of people recently about Feathercoin, and get asked the same thing. It would be good to have both a technical and a laymans terms answer as these days most people have heard about BTC.Marked for updates
UM
[/quote]uncle_muddy,
thanks for understanding and support. +1
peace,
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[quote name=“jti8899” post=“57121” timestamp=“1391556157”]
Please refrain from answers like “it’s the community that makes us different” cause we all know that.
[/quote]Why does a coin need anything more then a great community to set it apart from the other coins? its the community that believe in it and its the community that will push, promote and develop products and services around it to drive it into the mainstream.
A coin without a community, even if it does have amazing technology, is worth nothing!
In my experience the feathercoin community is truly one of the most amazing communities i have ever come across on the internet, never mind the crypto currency world.
So what sets it apart? THE COMMUNITY!! We believe in it, and we will continue to develop new technologies and services around feathercoin that over time will set it so far apart from the junk coins, that no one will ever need to ask this question again…
just my 2c
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[quote name=“mhamilton79” post=“57141” timestamp=“1391566767”]
[quote author=jti8899 link=topic=7426.msg57121#msg57121 date=1391556157]
Please refrain from answers like “it’s the community that makes us different” cause we all know that.
[/quote]Why does a coin need anything more then a great community to set it apart from the other coins? its the community that believe in it and its the community that will push, promote and develop products and services around it to drive it into the mainstream.
A coin without a community, even if it does have amazing technology, is worth nothing!
In my experience the feathercoin community is truly one of the most amazing communities i have ever come across on the internet, never mind the crypto currency world.
So what sets it apart? THE COMMUNITY!! We believe in it, and we will continue to develop new technologies and services around feathercoin that over time will set it so far apart from the junk coins, that no one will ever need to ask this question again…
just my 2c
[/quote]Apparently the best way to get a specific answer is to ask that it [b]NOT[/b] be given as the answer?
So lets say you could choose to live in any country in the world, and the only criteria you use to decide is that it be one where there is a “great community”, so you move and then find they also have a dictatorship, a lack of clean drinking water, rampant HIV virus, and so on!
Sorry but a “great community” just isn’t going to be the best solo criteria for making that decision. Same holds true here. The world is changing really fast, there are some unbelievable ideas being brought into reality level, like open transactions. The best ideas will ultimately draw the most creative minds. We have to become that if we want to get that. If we already are that, then give me your best sale pitch and see if I buy it!
Not saying great community isn’t important, just asking [u][b]what else[/b][/u] do we bring to the table?? I love the fact that feathercoin has a great community.
peace,
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Some great answers here. I’d like to offer my own:
The question is equlivent to saying, “Why is Los Angeles so much better than New York? They’re both pieces of land.”
In truth, the technical details are minimal: It’s got a faster coin generation rate, a faster retarget time, and it’s not decentralized like other coins: All clients connect to a single node run by the original creator of the coin to figure out what the current consensus is instead of following the rules of longest chain wins, kind of like Liberty Reserve, or Paypal, except the entire ledger is made public.
The difference lies in what people do with it, not how it works.
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[quote name=“Kevlar” post=“57151” timestamp=“1391570103”]
Some great answers here. I’d like to offer my own:The question is equlivent to saying, “Why is Los Angeles so much better than New York? They’re both pieces of land.”
In truth, the technical details are minimal: It’s got a faster coin generation rate, a faster retarget time, and it’s not decentralized like other coins: All clients connect to a single node run by the original creator of the coin to figure out what the current consensus is instead of following the rules of longest chain wins, kind of like Liberty Reserve, or Paypal, except the entire ledger is made public.
The difference lies in what people do with it, not how it works.
[/quote]kevlar,thanks for a great answer, I am forever giving you rep. If feathercoin are centralized by a main server could they be shut down by that server being taken out?
What does faster re target rate mean?
Liberty Reserve was shut down and the founder is hanging out in Spain under threat of US indictment. Hope this isn’t what’s in store? PayPal is just another credit Card scam in my book and takes lots of money from me every year.
How does a public ledger protect Feathercoin? Thanks again for the input!
~//~
Ref: [url=http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2014/01/liberty-reserve-source-code/]http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2014/01/liberty-reserve-source-code/[/url]
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[quote name=“jti8899” post=“57140” timestamp=“1391566270”]
Well then I should just tell people it’s just another alt currency, they are all basically the same, and you wouldn’t understand anyway?
[/quote]
There is nothing substantially different between Feathercoin and any other BTC fork. Sorry, but that’s the case. However it’s a lot cheaper and easier to mine, so it’s very attractive in the long term. It’s all very speculative. And I don’t believe that there is going to be a “killer feature” that is not related to increasing confidence in CC that will ultimately be the primary selling point for the masses. And any coin is only as useful as the ecosystem around it - and who builds this ecosystem? Oh wait, I can’t say because that’s not the answer you want to hear.
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[quote name=“estrabd” post=“57155” timestamp=“1391571521”]
[quote author=jti8899 link=topic=7426.msg57140#msg57140 date=1391566270]Well then I should just tell people it’s just another alt currency, they are all basically the same, and you wouldn’t understand anyway?
[/quote]
There is nothing substantially different between Feathercoin and any other BTC fork. Sorry, but that’s the case. However it’s a lot cheaper and easier to mine, so it’s very attractive in the long term. It’s all very speculative. And I don’t believe that there is going to be a “killer feature” that is not related to increasing confidence in CC that will ultimately be the primary selling point for the masses. And any coin is only as useful as the ecosystem around it - and who builds this ecosystem? Oh wait, I can’t say because that’s not the answer you want to hear.
[/quote]Really hope your not in sales?
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[quote name=“jti8899” post=“57156” timestamp=“1391572121”]
Really hope your not in sales?
[/quote]Mark Cuban, is that you? :P
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Not Mark Cuban, but thanks for killing this threads usefulness. I specifically asked not to give the “great community” answer. This is my last reply to you. enjoy the last word
peace
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[quote name=“jti8899” post=“57154” timestamp=“1391570842”]
[quote author=Kevlar link=topic=7426.msg57151#msg57151 date=1391570103]
Some great answers here. I’d like to offer my own:The question is equlivent to saying, “Why is Los Angeles so much better than New York? They’re both pieces of land.”
In truth, the technical details are minimal: It’s got a faster coin generation rate, a faster retarget time, and it’s not decentralized like other coins: All clients connect to a single node run by the original creator of the coin to figure out what the current consensus is instead of following the rules of longest chain wins, kind of like Liberty Reserve, or Paypal, except the entire ledger is made public.
The difference lies in what people do with it, not how it works.
[/quote]kevlar,thanks for a great answer, I am forever giving you rep. If feathercoin are centralized by a main server could they be shut down by that server being taken out?
What does faster re target rate mean?
Liberty Reserve was shut down and the founder is hanging out in Spain under threat of US indictment. Hope this isn’t what’s in store? PayPal is just another credit Card scam in my book and takes lots of money from me every year.
How does a public ledger protect Feathercoin? Thanks again for the input!
~//~
Ref: [url=http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2014/01/liberty-reserve-source-code/]http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2014/01/liberty-reserve-source-code/[/url]
[/quote]The difficulty retargeting has to do with how often the difficulty is adjusted in order to keep the block generation rate at 2.5 minutes. It’s every 150 something blocks for FTC, but every 2000 something blocks for LTC and BTC. This means that FTC will respond to increases and decreases in the hash rate much quicker, allowing the coin generation rate to remain constant for longer.
Shutting down ACP would just return it to it’s regularly decentralized program, just like BTC and LTC. The Liberty Reserve guy was accused of money laundering, and most of their business revolved around exchanging fiat for LR. This is a little different because Bushstar isn’t actually acting as the broker for the exchange of money, just as the record of account for where the coins are going.
The public ledger provides transparency. Unlike Paypal or LR, you can see ALL the transactions that occur on the Feathercoin network. You can also create transactions on the network without talking to the ACP server, it’s just that eventually someone will mine a block with your transaction in it, and that will be checkpointed by the ACP server, which prevents reorganizations of the blockchain by potentially malicious pool operators/miners with lots of hash power. There’s much discussion surrounding how to eliminate ACP going on right now for that very reason: We want to prevent malicious reorgs while still keeping the coin decentralized. We’re getting very close too. Wrapper has done a great job of moving the project forward, and starting next week I’m going to be involved in it too.
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[quote name=“Kevlar” post=“57163” timestamp=“1391574185”]
[quote author=jti8899 link=topic=7426.msg57154#msg57154 date=1391570842]
[quote author=Kevlar link=topic=7426.msg57151#msg57151 date=1391570103]
Some great answers here. I’d like to offer my own:The question is equlivent to saying, “Why is Los Angeles so much better than New York? They’re both pieces of land.”
In truth, the technical details are minimal: It’s got a faster coin generation rate, a faster retarget time, and it’s not decentralized like other coins: All clients connect to a single node run by the original creator of the coin to figure out what the current consensus is instead of following the rules of longest chain wins, kind of like Liberty Reserve, or Paypal, except the entire ledger is made public.
The difference lies in what people do with it, not how it works.
[/quote]kevlar,thanks for a great answer, I am forever giving you rep. If feathercoin are centralized by a main server could they be shut down by that server being taken out?
What does faster re target rate mean?
Liberty Reserve was shut down and the founder is hanging out in Spain under threat of US indictment. Hope this isn’t what’s in store? PayPal is just another credit Card scam in my book and takes lots of money from me every year.
How does a public ledger protect Feathercoin? Thanks again for the input!
~//~
Ref: [url=http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2014/01/liberty-reserve-source-code/]http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2014/01/liberty-reserve-source-code/[/url]
[/quote]The difficulty retargeting has to do with how often the difficulty is adjusted in order to keep the block generation rate at 2.5 minutes. It’s every 150 something blocks for FTC, but every 2000 something blocks for LTC and BTC. This means that FTC will respond to increases and decreases in the hash rate much quicker, allowing the coin generation rate to remain constant for longer.
Shutting down ACP would just return it to it’s regularly decentralized program, just like BTC and LTC. The Liberty Reserve guy was accused of money laundering, and most of their business revolved around exchanging fiat for LR. This is a little different because Bushstar isn’t actually acting as the broker for the exchange of money, just as the record of account for where the coins are going.
The public ledger provides transparency. Unlike Paypal or LR, you can see ALL the transactions that occur on the Feathercoin network. You can also create transactions on the network without talking to the ACP server, it’s just that eventually someone will mine a block with your transaction in it, and that will be checkpointed by the ACP server, which prevents reorganizations of the blockchain by potentially malicious pool operators/miners with lots of hash power. There’s much discussion surrounding how to eliminate ACP going on right now for that very reason: We want to prevent malicious reorgs while still keeping the coin decentralized. We’re getting very close too. Wrapper has done a great job of moving the project forward, and starting next week I’m going to be involved in it too.
[/quote]kevlar,
this is exactly the kind of discussion I was intending to create. I know that almost everyone drives cars, many people really don’t care to know how they work, but for those of us who do we take them apart and put them together and learn all about stoichiometric mixtures, and tweak and tune till we hear noises that don’t even exist when we drive. I am one of those people, though not quite as dev savy as yourself, these things are very meaningful to me.
I would totally be willing to put together a bit of writing on the topic of “Feathercoin, what it is and isn’t and how it differs from other alt currencies” based on the content of discussions such as these.
I know you offer a ton of help and assistance to the community as a whole, so not asking you for anything except honest straight forwards answers to inquiries such as the ones in your last quoted post.
Maybe other devs and even Bushstar can chime in and after I get a few drafts together those people could review and correct them or me and together we could create material easily passed out to interested parties?
Mostly I am a hands on learner so this would be a side benefit of that learning process. I do not yet understand this whole realm of crypto things beyond surface level at best, so I am learning as I go. To be honest it was open sharing community that drew me to feathercoin, but it will be value that keeps me here and that is a much broader topic.
thanks again for your input
~//~
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Hmmm, it is a coin with a lot of support. Technically the coin/code itself isn’t superior or that great (subjective) honestly - their are coins with faster confirms that make them more feasible for actual daily use which is important, others with more value/adoption where speed isn’t necessary, and others with better types of cryptographic hash functions to protect mining, etc.
Love FTC, the “community”, but haven’t observed any acceptance of negatives ever in these forums usually.
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Community and aplications.
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[quote name=“mirrax” post=“57179” timestamp=“1391582259”]
Community and aplications.
[/quote]Could/would you elaborate on “applications” please?
thanks
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[quote name=“jti8899” post=“57185” timestamp=“1391587364”]
[quote author=mirrax link=topic=7426.msg57179#msg57179 date=1391582259]
Community and aplications.
[/quote]Could/would you elaborate on “applications” please?
thanks
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[/quote]There is lot of applications created by forum members:
FTC Market (with lot of cool FTC projects inside i.e. FTC Vine, Laser Etched wallets, T-Shirts, Stickers,…)
CryptoKnox - online wallet
FTC Games
FTC paper wallet generator
Local Feathercoin map
Lot of great FTC graphics and tutorials
Button generator
LINKThose are only few examples, I am sure there is much more.
Also what I din’t saw is other coin with such rich weekly newsletters.But you are right, if you ask what makes FTC algorithm special, than right answer is absolutely nothing.
It is Litecoin fork with changed parameters and ACP added. -
I’m going to quote Aristotle here…
[quote=“Aristotle”]â€Å"The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.â€Â[/quote]
You can’t remove community and form a correct answer because it’s part of the combined beast.
Humans were just another hominid, but they now are found thriving in every corner of the world, masters over their environment. Were they that much different from other competing hominids? Not at all. What sets them apart are the same strengths that sets us apart when we trust in the community, the ability to cooperate in a tribe, communicate and formulate solutions and adapt to any given change in environment. It might not seem like much now to ‘spec sheet’ buyers, but when faced with adversity, we have a greater weapon to push innovations and needed technical changes. We have the ability to adapt.
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[quote name=“jti8899” post=“57159” timestamp=“1391573188”]
Not Mark Cuban, but thanks for killing this threads usefulness. I specifically asked not to give the “great community” answer.
[/quote]Your question has been answered, but I’m afraid it’s probably not as spectacular as you had hoped. If there is a feature you’d like to see in Feathercoin, I’d be interested in hearing it. I enjoy the threads discussing ideas and new features, though much of it is over my head. Perhaps a you had a killer service in mind? The base technology is there, what is needed are services.
There probably exists on a handful of features that would make FTC on par with the more interesting coins, but not many. The biggest on my list is probably anonymity. I’ve also thought it’d be interesting if there was a coin that spontaneously split, allowing growth in other more interesting ways.
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[quote name=“mirrax” post=“57196” timestamp=“1391592842”]
There is lot of applications created by forum members:
FTC Market (with lot of cool FTC projects inside i.e. FTC Vine, Laser Etched wallets, T-Shirts, Stickers,…)
CryptoKnox - online wallet[/quote]
Thanks for pointing out CryptoKnox -I’ve been looking for an online FTC wallet.
Regarding the market, this is probably the most compelling thing about FTC. Hopefully this market will grow to the point where it is large and dynamic, not unlike the eBay market place. Retailers are adding BTC to what they accept all of the time; most major retailers have stores on eBay (Overstock included) - I don’t see why at some point they wouldn’t want to open a store on the the FTC market. Probably more energy should be directed to the market itself - improving it and promoting it. Maybe CryptoKnox can get to the point where it’s the payment processor of choice for the market.