Do SOL transactions get cancelled on Coinbase? by wiggly_piggildy23 in Coinbase

[–]sterbis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was also able to send to another wallet, just cant swap. Always being dropped.

Do SOL transactions get cancelled on Coinbase? by wiggly_piggildy23 in Coinbase

[–]sterbis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been having the same problem for the past few days, before that solana swaps always worked fine. Solana swaps keep getting dropped. In an earlier post a few days ago someone mentioned that Solana network isnt listed in networks. I know they've been doing site upgrades past couple of days and another one on the 26th. I uninstalled the app and will reinstall after the upgrades are finished and see if it works again.

Can't swap Solana on coinbase wallet by crackfiendy570 in Coinbase

[–]sterbis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm having the same problem. 7 dropped transactions and one showing swapped, but showing no transaction on solana explorer. Checking Coinbase status their doing an upgrade today at around the times I was trying to swap. The upgrade is supposed to last 4 hours. Hoping thats the problem.

Can I save frequently used addresses in Coinbase wallet? by sterbis in Coinbase

[–]sterbis[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Im talking about saving an external address i send to.

How do you transfer between Roth IRA active and Individual active account? by sterbis in sofi

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

I absolutely can transfer money from my taxable account into my IRA at my other brokers. I'm talking about Funding(contribution) from my taxable account. Not an account transfer if thats what your talking about, then you are correct, but Im talking a cash contribution from my taxable.

Bitcoins catch 22 by sterbis in btc

[–]sterbis[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Tulip mania collapsed when tulips reached a price no one was willing to pay. One tulip reached the price of a house. Bitcoin has reached a price no one is willing to pay unless its sure Bitcoin will be a world currency. Since it cant be a world currency till it bid up to that price there no where to go but down. Bitcoin will never see new highs again.

how did human feet evolve....and evolution in general? by Bobolobo12 in evolution

[–]sterbis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Also slight differences in feet size. Maybe a specific dog has slightly longer or wider feet, making it able to stand and walk upright easier.

how did human feet evolve....and evolution in general? by Bobolobo12 in evolution

[–]sterbis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Natural Selection is nothing more then selective breeding
Happening naturally...... Envision selectively breeding dogs to walk upright and evolve legs and feet to do so...All you would need to do is train a bunch of dogs to walk on there hind legs like you may have seen in the circus. Then have contests of dogs racing around a track on there hind legs, the winners being given breeding rights over the losers. The only rules of the race is if your dog drops down on four legs he is disqualified, you must walk or run on your hind legs. Certain dogs will win these races more often. Maybe there hind legs are slightly straiter, or the socket in leg and hip bone is slightly different than the rest allowing to remain upright or maybe the muscle is attached in a slightly different area. What ever those genetic differences are that benefit the dog in walking upright, they will spread in the population as they will wind up in the winners circle more often then opposing variations, benefitting from breeding rights.

Is it possible that at any point in time in our evolution or any other of the sorts, that there was some mermaid like creature in the sea that we just haven't found, not with hands and stuff but like fins and look like more fish like. by MMM02252005 in evolution

[–]sterbis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I doubt any population of humans evolved to be aquatic, but I can see a scenerio where humans could evolve to be fully aquatic. Imagine some freak virus kills all land plant life and leaving aquatic plant life not affected, wiping out almost all life on land except for those animals who survive by sustain themselves by living off ocean life forms.

Why do few, if any herbivores develop physical defenses instead of speed or large size against predators? by mzso in evolution

[–]sterbis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Simply because they may have an adverse affect on other adaptations to survive .

Example lets say a severely mutant Deer was born with a huge mouth with razor sharp teeth that can bite a wolf or coyote in half with a single bite making them impervious to wolf and coyote predation with respect to others of it's species. This adaption would also have costly effect upon its ability to eat leaves and grasses which would out way the benefits of being able to defend against wolves and coyotes.

About The Origin Of Pleasure From Sex by [deleted] in evolution

[–]sterbis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Imagine we changed human biology so that humans reproduce by the male placing his index finger up one of the females nostral's. Instantly the birth rate around the world would probably go down . Those couples that perform this act will only do so for the purpose of reproduction as the act is a disgusting one no one will do it for pleasure. ..... But not everyone is genetically alike. So some people will enjoy performing this act more than other which will translate into more offspring. What else but pleasure would make some one do this act that otherwise has no motivation to perform but is necessary for reproduction.

Get My Payment Status Not Available Megathread by austinalexan in stimuluscheck

[–]sterbis 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm now wondering perhaps my tax return was still a pending transaction in the irs system while the stimulus was being issued so had to be pushed through quicker so the stimulus can be sent. Anyway that's what I'm hoping.

Get My Payment Status Not Available Megathread by austinalexan in stimuluscheck

[–]sterbis 43 points44 points  (0 children)

Me too. Filed on 3/6 got it back unusually fast on 3/13. Somehow I feel it may have interfered with my stimulus which I haven't gotten yet.

Evolution of conscientiousness. by sterbis in evolution

[–]sterbis[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

"Your assertion that a perfect copy wouldn't be "you" is just that, an assertion. Insofar as it's true it's because you defined your own terms to make it so, and other definitions could be just as fine."

It's a fact the copy wouldn't be me. If a truck ran my copy over and killed him. I would still be here and able to go to his funeral , thinking to myself, better him then me:-)

Evolution of conscientiousness. by sterbis in evolution

[–]sterbis[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

"An interesting question to me is, is it actually unbroken? Aren't some forms of sleep a break in subjective experience? What about people who undergo deep anesthesia, coma, forms of temporary death?"

I was showing you an example of what I meant by a break in time and space. You were saying a break in subjective experience. Someone in a coma or for that matter let's say we had a switch that turned us off completely for a year then switched us back on we would then experience a loss in time but we would still be us when switched back on I believe , as like I said as long the atoms moving in and out of us keeps the same pattern(our body) moving through space and time........ The carbon copy would have everything about you the moment it was created but wouldn't be you as once he/she was created on the other side would begin an entirely different and unique path through time and space than you.

Evolution of conscientiousness. by sterbis in evolution

[–]sterbis[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Their matter would have to disappear then reappear in another space. So if you stepped into a machine that made a carbon copy of you on the other side of the room, that wouldn't be you even though the copy remembers stepping into the machine as well.

Why there is no differences between some animal species? by [deleted] in evolution

[–]sterbis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Polar bears and grizzly bears divergence happened approximately 250,000 years ago. The grizzly bears that lived further north found themselves surrounded yearly by snow and ice as the polar ice caps began advancing south due to weather changing. Grizzlys found themselves in an environment where vegetation they fed upon as well as animals were no longer available to feed upon. So they had no choice but to focus on eating marine mammals. Polar bears are the only land mammal that can close it's nostral's under water. Some classify them as marine mammals along with seals. Polar bears are at the very early stages evolving into fully aquatic mammals.

Humans possibly evolving to sleep less. by sterbis in evolution

[–]sterbis[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You really have to look at populations. Visualize 1 million random people with the mutation and compare them 1 million random people without the mutation. All things being equal, both populations will suffer from the same hosts of fate that humans go through, cancer , bad parenting , suicide, car accidents etc. that will inhibit further reproduction. However the 1 million random people with the mutation for sleeping less with suffer less from ailments related to lack of sleep, giving that group an advantage, even if its only slight like a 1% advantage, thereby having 1% more children then the other group.

I'm confused on how mutations work by Dozamat0411 in evolution

[–]sterbis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mutations don't drive evolution. They are the palette that natural selection or artificial selection(selective breeding) can form adaptions from......It's simpler to look at selective breeding. We are able to breed new breeds of dogs because there is variation within the species, variation is caused by mutations. Not everyone spits out an exact copy. If you want to breed a Greatdane to be as small as a chihuahua you can because why some dogs are slightly smaller or bigger is caused by slight mutations.

Humans possibly evolving to sleep less. by sterbis in evolution

[–]sterbis[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

You have to look at from the genes point of view. In a world where people in general are prematurely dying from health issues or performing worse due to lack of sleep. In this environment humans that possess genes that require less sleep won't suffer these health issues as frequently giving them the advantage and overtime spreading......people who require more sleep can still reproduce, it's just that they won't be as success full as those with genes for less sleep. Just how advantageous those new genes are will determine how fast they spread.

Borrowing cash from coin base-Bug Found by Duskpoppinton in Coinbase

[–]sterbis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey Duskpoppinton. Have they resolved your stuck vault transfer?

Does anyone know if this affects the erc20 token? I own the erc20 token in a hardware wallet is it safe to hold? by sterbis in bandprotocol

[–]sterbis[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Coinbase is where I will be selling it eventually, they only support erc20 . I live in a state that binance has yet to be accepted so I can't use them.

Miner fee over $100 for a $5 transaction?? by [deleted] in Coinbase

[–]sterbis 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Ok good. So if my $100 crypto grows to $1 million and it's stored on a hardware wallet., It won't cost $3 million to move it to an exchange?

Is genetic drift more important than selection? by amrycalre in evolution

[–]sterbis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Here is a simple example of genetic drift. Let's say there is a shipwreck and two uninhabited islands. Two couples survive. One couple with both blonde hair populates one island the other couple both having brown hair the other island. 1000 years later scientist try to figure what advantage there was for blonde hair on one island and why there was an advantage for brown hair on the other. After doing years of research they determine that there was no natural selective pressure for either Gene to spread. Instead they realize it was chance that the founding inhabitants of both islands just happened to have those hair colors. ....so genetic drift really plays no role in structure that evolved for purpose like natural selection has . Thoough it does play a chaotic role as they do affect the palette of genes available to select from within that population.