If you have a checking account and can wait a few days for verification for ACH transfers, coinbase.com is one of the easiest ways to buy bitcoin.
Coinbase also allows merchant accounts for accepting bitcoins and smartphone apps to trade in person.
Depending on where you're at you could get some from a Bitcoin ATM which would be cheaper than localbitcoins http://www.coindesk.com/bitcoin-atm-map/
For a hot wallet I personally like https://blockchain.info/wallet
It's an online service however it's secured so only you have access to your bitcoins. There is also a smartphone app tied to the website.
This gives you the ease of QR codes and sending/receiving coins in person.
Oh and have fun jumping in the crypto rabbit hole!
Is bitcoin broken? Prominent developer cashes out
By Paul Vigna
Published: Jan 17, 2016 7:23 p.m. ET
Cybercurrency roiled by network congestion issues
Bloomberg News
The price of bitcoin plunged 20% last week.
A prominent bitcoin developer has labeled the currency a failed experiment, widening the rift over an arcane but critical technical issue that has divided the community for nearly a year.
“The fundamentals are broken, and whatever happens to the price in the short term, the long-term trend should probably be downwards,” developer Mike Hearn wrote on the blogging platform Medium. “I will no longer be taking part in bitcoin development and have sold all my coins.”
The fight stems from growing congestion on the bitcoin network caused by size limits within the currency’s ledger of transactions. If the limits aren’t raised, the result could be debilitating bottlenecks. But fixing it requires altering a system that has been profitable for those that use heavy computer power to record transactions.
Hearn has been a vocal proponent for expanding the size limits. The problem is bitcoin is open-source software, so any change has to be approved a majority of the community, and it hasn’t been able to agree.
This isn’t the first time somebody has written bitcoin’s obituary. What is different is this obit was being written by a prominent insider, and it hit a raw nerve in the community. The price of bitcoin, which had been stable for months, dropped sharply, down 20% last week to $358. The price regained some ground over the weekend, and many are still defending the currency in the wake of Hearn’s comments.
Bitcoin has always had a divisive edge. Believers laud it as a currency that is free from central banks and a transaction system that works outside the normal financial system. Skeptics see it as a kooky currency whose values soar and crash unpredictably, a casino for computer nerds. Governments can’t even agree whether it is a currency or a commodity.
An expanded version of this report appears on WSJ.com.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/is-bitcoin-broken-prominent-developer-cashes-out-2016-01-17
Thanks for reposting old news without any personal interpretation.
If you want to dissuade people from buying in to bitcoin, at least present your own argument. Don't just dump a slanted article on the thread and run away.
Is bitcoin broken? Prominent developer cashes out
By Paul Vigna
Published: Jan 17, 2016 7:23 p.m. ET
Cybercurrency roiled by network congestion issues
Bloomberg News
The price of bitcoin plunged 20% last week.
A prominent bitcoin developer has labeled the currency a failed experiment, widening the rift over an arcane but critical technical issue that has divided the community for nearly a year.
“The fundamentals are broken, and whatever happens to the price in the short term, the long-term trend should probably be downwards,” developer Mike Hearn wrote on the blogging platform Medium. “I will no longer be taking part in bitcoin development and have sold all my coins.”
The fight stems from growing congestion on the bitcoin network caused by size limits within the currency’s ledger of transactions. If the limits aren’t raised, the result could be debilitating bottlenecks. But fixing it requires altering a system that has been profitable for those that use heavy computer power to record transactions.
Hearn has been a vocal proponent for expanding the size limits. The problem is bitcoin is open-source software, so any change has to be approved a majority of the community, and it hasn’t been able to agree.
This isn’t the first time somebody has written bitcoin’s obituary. What is different is this obit was being written by a prominent insider, and it hit a raw nerve in the community. The price of bitcoin, which had been stable for months, dropped sharply, down 20% last week to $358. The price regained some ground over the weekend, and many are still defending the currency in the wake of Hearn’s comments.
Bitcoin has always had a divisive edge. Believers laud it as a currency that is free from central banks and a transaction system that works outside the normal financial system. Skeptics see it as a kooky currency whose values soar and crash unpredictably, a casino for computer nerds. Governments can’t even agree whether it is a currency or a commodity.
An expanded version of this report appears on WSJ.com.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/is-bitcoin-broken-prominent-developer-cashes-out-2016-01-17
Old news? Posted here before? The date of this article is two days ago.
Information= bad
Old news? Posted here before? The date of this article is two days ago.
Information= bad
I keep my coins split between btce and bitfinex, but I rarely visit either exchange moving my coins by api key.
I like them because 1) they're both secure 2) you can move coins in and out without papers 3) they don't trade too many alt coins which introduce vulnerabilities.
I bought in many moons back via ZipZap MoneyGram from Walmart, I'm not sure that option even exists anymore.
I trade using the cloud services at tradewave.net where I also lease botscript, "Honey Badger".
You can find my "litepresence report on crypto currency" with news and technical analysis here at ronpaulforums.com
If you really want to become a vibrant part of the crypto economy... become a vendor or run some business that accepts bitcoin then use your earnings to buy from other vendors. When you've completed that loop a few times you'll come to appreciate what bitcoin REALLY is.
If fiat paper money is all a scam, BTC may be the best improved scheme for the future.
For now, it's just a bit more appealing, as an alternative. Banks/gov want "in"!
I work for a very large eBay business, and I have a dream that I could save the company over 15% by programming a website to auction off our stuff with BTC on our own site and giving eBay the finger. That's a super long term goal though. I have to learn how to move BTC myself first lol.
If you have a checking account and can wait a few days for verification for ACH transfers, coinbase.com is one of the easiest ways to buy bitcoin.
Coinbase also allows merchant accounts for accepting bitcoins and smartphone apps to trade in person.
Depending on where you're at you could get some from a Bitcoin ATM which would be cheaper than localbitcoins http://www.coindesk.com/bitcoin-atm-map/
For a hot wallet I personally like https://blockchain.info/wallet
It's an online service however it's secured so only you have access to your bitcoins. There is also a smartphone app tied to the website.
This gives you the ease of QR codes and sending/receiving coins in person.
Oh and have fun jumping in the crypto rabbit hole!
is blockchain.info running well again? I have the bc.i app for my iphone, and haven't been able to send btc for a couple months from it. The web version has worked for me, but others have had problems with that, too. Also there was an issue with bc.i "verifying" transactions that had few-to-no node verifications that weren't proven to be true via the core blockchain after the fact.
They seem to be losing market reputation lately, and I haven't seen anything recently that's made that turn around.
I'm going to try the breadwallet app and see how that works in the next few days.
I work for a very large eBay business, and I have a dream that I could save the company over 15% by programming a website to auction off our stuff with BTC on our own site and giving eBay the finger. That's a super long term goal though. I have to learn how to move BTC myself first lol.