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Bitcoin History Part 18: The First Bitcoin Wallet


Bitcoin users today are blessed with a panoply of feature-rich software and hardware wallets. When Bitcoin launched, however, there were no wallets. It took Satoshi Nakamoto to engineer the first desktop client, and his creation proved surprisingly resilient, serving the community faithfully...

Unshackled


CoinMarketCap Daily Newsletter Your daily newsletter for 3 October, 2019 Stay free “Life without liberty is like a body without spirit.” – Khalil Gibran Happy Thursday, folks! Time for your daily dose of crypto news! ????     Today in history (2333BC), Dangun […] The post Unshackled appeared...

Unshackled


CoinMarketCap Daily Newsletter Your daily newsletter for 3 October, 2019 Stay free “Life without liberty is like a body without spirit.” – Khalil Gibran Happy Thursday, folks! Time for your daily dose of crypto news! ????     Today in history (2333BC), Dangun […] The post Unshackled appeared...

Bitcoin History Part 17: That Time Mt. Gox Destroyed 2,609 BTC


Technically speaking, it’s impossible to destroy bitcoins. But it is possible to send coins to an unspendable address, rendering them redundant to all intents and purposes. In October 2011, that’s exactly what Mark Karpeles did when he consigned 2,609 BTC to eternal oblivion due to...

Fortune favors the bold


CoinMarketCap Daily Newsletter Your daily newsletter for 20 September, 2019 Be brave “The future doesn't belong to the fainthearted; it belongs to the brave." – Ronald Reagan TGIF! Great job, CoinMarketCap family! That's another week down.  ????   Today in history (1848), […] The post Fortune...

Web Developer Search History


Sophie Koonin blogged "Everything I googled in a week as a professional software engineer," which was a fascinating look into the mind of a web developer and what they need to look up during day-to-day work. We all joke that we just Google stuff (or StackOverflow stuff) we don't know off the...

(Why) Some HTML is “optional”


Remy Sharp digs into the history of the web and describes why the <p> tag doesn’t need to be closed like this: <p>Paragraphs don’t need to be closed <p>Pretty weird, huh? Remy writes: Pre-DOM, pre-browsers, the world's first browser was being written by Sir...

A Short History of the World’s Largest Bitcoin Mining Pools


Mining pools grow and shrink, and rise and fall altogether. Today there are more extinct mining pools than there are active ones. The hashpower of the survivors secures hundreds of PoW crypto networks, from major coins such as BTC and BCH to obscure altcoins such as monero classic...

Privacy Network Elixxir Invites Smartphone Users to Test Private Messaging


In an age where Google, Facebook and the NSA are known to be harvesting as much as our communications as they can, many people are concerned that online privacy now only exists in the history books. One project trying to address this is the metadata-shredding platform Elixxir, led by cypherpunk...

Roger Ver Shares His Story in New Video Series


As someone who was there from virtually the start, Roger Ver has seen and done it all in Bitcoin. A tireless evangelist for Bitcoin since long before it was cool, Ver remains a vocal proponent of the benefits of peer-to-peer cash and its power to effect positive change in the world. Every day this...

Venezuelans Fighting Economic Hardship Discover Crypto’s True Potential


For quite some time now, Venezuela has been suffering from a political crisis and a collapsing economy. Venezuelans dealing with rampant inflation continue to see their purchasing power decline. After witnessing one of the worst economic disasters in modern history, 4 million citizens have...

Roger Ver alleges Theymos behind the deletion of Bitcoin History


The cryptocurrency space has its own share of controversies that keep on popping up every now and then. The latest one is revolving around Theymos, who is the administrator of Bitcointalk and Bitcoin.org. Besides, Theymos is also a Bitcoin moderator on Reddit. There is no denying the fact that...

Bitcoin History Part 16: The First Mt. Gox Hack


No one remembers the first Mt. Gox hack. It was a small sum, even by 2011’s standards, and the exchange reimbursed all users. The incident was to prove significant, however, for it set in motion a string of attacks on other bitcoin platforms that began the very next day. By the time the dust...

Let’s Build a JAMstack E-Commerce Store with Netlify Functions


A lot of people are confused about what JAMstack is. The acronym stands for JavaScript, APIs, and Markup, but truly, JAMstack doesn’t have to include all three. What defines JAMstack is that it’s served without web servers. If you consider the history of computing, this type of abstraction isn’t...

Bitcoin History Part 15: Silk Road Is Born


Silk Road launched in February 2011 as the darknet’s first bitcoin-based marketplace. Within four months, it would be the darknet’s most notorious site whose reputation extended all the way to the U.S. Senate. The origins of the drugs marketplace can be traced back further, however,...

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