This is my review of Ethereum that I posted on my YouTube channel on June 26th, 2017. Back when ETH was a lot cheaper than it is now!
***I am in the process of adding many of my videos from YouTube on to DTube. Apologies for any posts that you've already seen before!
▶️ DTube ▶️ IPFS
looking Back. :)
Well I guess the trend is UP UP UP
thank you for the review
great! @louisthomas would you like to read our blog on "why companies should establish crypto"?! looking for some feedback from an cryptoblog pro!? i would be very thankfull ! have a great day and thanks for your great content!
Thank you for the post. What are your thoughts on xrp? I need more insights.
Check out his last vid, its all about XRP, a very good overview
Many regret that when ETC was cheap, we did hold more. We can never turn back time. Hope for the best in 2018!
Thanks for sharing, just want the price to go higher. But today's rates are all in red. I am so freaking out right now, just when I felt the market was becoming stable.
If you're freaking out because of this small - yes for cryptos this is small - dip, you're probably in the wrong market my friend or you've invested too much money.
I think ETH has first mover advantage and developers will gravitate to ETH for the same reason. The biggest threat to ETH will be an ICO meltdown and a delay in the lightning network rolling out.
In finance, a futures contract (more colloquially, futures) is a standardized forward contract, a legal agreement to buy or sell something at a predetermined price at a specified time in the future. The asset transacted is usually a commodity or financial instrument. The predetermined price the parties agree to buy and sell the asset for is known as the forward price. The specified time in the future—which is when delivery and payment occur—is known as the delivery date. Because it is a function of an underlying asset, a futures contract is a derivative product.
Contracts are negotiated at futures exchanges, which act as a marketplace between buyers and sellers. The buyer of a contract is said to be long position holder, and the selling party is said to be short position holder.[1] As both parties risk their counter-party walking away if the price goes against them, the contract may involve both parties lodging a margin of the value of the contract with a mutually trusted third party. For example, in gold futures trading, the margin varies between 2% and 20% depending on the volatility of the spot market.[2]
The first futures contracts were negotiated for agricultural commodities, and later futures contracts were negotiated for natural resources such as oil. Financial futures were introduced in 1972, and in recent decades, currency futures, interest rate futures and stock market index futures have played an increasingly large role in the overall futures markets.
The original use of futures contracts was to mitigate the risk of price or exchange rate movements by allowing parties to fix prices or rates in advance for future transactions. This could be advantageous when (for example) a party expects to receive payment in foreign currency in the future, and wishes to guard against an unfavorable movement of the currency in the interval before payment is received.
However, futures contracts also offer opportunities for speculation in that a trader who predicts that the price of an asset will move in a particular direction can contract to buy or sell it in the future at a price which (if the prediction is correct) will yield a profit.
Can or did you do a review on Nexus? (I don't use YouTube as much anymore)
Thanks for the review
nice review. Thanks.