Are you too late for the Cyrptocyrrency party??

in bitcoin •  7 years ago 

You may ask yourself has the boat already sailed in the cyrptocurrency world? "Is it too late for me?" you may ask. I feel like the answer is absolutely not.

I am still uninvested in Cyrptocurrency. Although i was interested in Bitcoin when it first hit the $40 price point, i never invested unfortunatly. Had i bought in then just a few years ago i could have 100x'd my investment. Outside of a casino where are you going to find returns like that?!? The problem is, i have had problems purchasing cyrptocurrency when i actually did attempt to buy some. So to me it feels like an exclusive club that allows people in some geographical areas in, while United States residents in smaller cities, with smaller local banks have issues getting in.

More than anything it is important to get in early (as an investor) to reap full rewards. However, it is never too late to begin using e-currency just for its convenience. I sporatically recieve international checks from online businesses. They offer payments with bitcoin as well, which means

-no more waiting 3 weeks for a check
-smaller associated fees
-no second guessing if the money is coming

All in all, saying its too late to join the E-Currency world is like saying it is too late to join the internet. Its bound to be a major part of our future.

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Lots of people kick themselves daily for not buying Bitcoin at $100 or less back in 2010 or even earlier, but the truth of the matter is that it was quite hard to buy Bitcoin in the first few years. Most people were steered towards online exchanges, but those proved to be hackable or subject to confiscation. See Mt. Gox as the largest example. Then the currency controls in the USA tightened with "know your customer" requirements and most people found out that they could only buy Bitcoin with a high $100+ minimum to a foreign bank with an expensive $35 wire transfer fee and lots of paperwork to sign physically at the bank. Online exchanges that link to an US bank are still rare (https://gemini.com/), while some use Visa credit cards to do the transfer to Bitcoin on an online exchange.

Most desktop wallets are still in their Windows 3.1/95 stage (think Bitcoin Core/QT or Monero Wallet), although multi-coin "lightwallets" such as Exodus (https://www.exodus.io/) show promise. But most new users of crypto currencies don't have the time (seven to twenty days, even on 20-50 GB cable modem) or the hard drive space to download six or more blockchains for their desktop wallets. You have the "cart and horse" paradox of choosing which alt-coin to invest in based upon which online exchange you can access with your USD, and which alt-coins you can transfer to a single wallet or multi-wallet on your desktop. Developers need to provide better programming in the form of wallets for their alt-coin, rather than depend upon the exchanges to offer their Initial Coin Offering (ICO) at startup time.

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