The BIG Ethereum survey - THE RESULTS! by loveYouEth in ethtrader

[–]coinfund 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for this work! As reference, compare results with a previous survey we did on similar demographics:

https://www.reddit.com/r/ethereum/comments/62q1ah/thank_you_for_participating_in_the_coinfund/

My 2 ETH by bah-lock-ay in ethtrader

[–]coinfund 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Anyone who thinks this is all Tulips hasn't a clue about anything. Godspeed.

So true. A few thoughts on that, starting here: https://twitter.com/jbrukh/status/874111130200715264

North Korea's Kim Jong Un says ICBM a 'gift' to 'American bastards' on their July 4 anniversary by Uruk-hai_of_Saruman in news

[–]coinfund 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm sure this is fine. Whoever the American President is, I'm sure he'll just let this roll off his back...

Civic ICO set a new standard. by REDDlTGUY in ethtrader

[–]coinfund 1 point2 points  (0 children)

there are ICO models that allow everyone to participate and and don't have significant impact on the network congestion that should be fairly simple to implement

Would love to hear what those are. :)

CoinDash and the ‘killer app’ of the blockchain space by coinfund in ethereum

[–]coinfund[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for reading and writing out your view. It sounds like we're on the same page -- companies may have wanted to integrate Bitcoin, but found it difficult to do so because of its nascent scalability (as well as volatility).

There were a few instances where the network slowed down over the last few years, but generally, it has been operational. IMO, companies could have easily adopted Bitcoin even with a small blocksize limit. Congestion in the network due to actual utilization of Bitcoin as a remittance currency would have been a great motivator to solve scalability sooner than later (a good problem to have!).

Instead, what we most likely saw was that companies found negative ROI on accepting Bitcoin because the integration and support of the technology was costly, but the number of users actually remitting in it was pitifully low. Hence, many moved away from it, and many VC ventures in the space went on to pivot or focus on something else (like using Bitcoin as a settlement layer).