> the takeover-the-world echo-chambers of ethereum
You toss out this pejorative description, and then in the next paragraph:
> When talking about engineering on such a critical subject, people should be way more responsible.
This is absurd. How could it ever become critical without a lot of research and development first?
I've been holding a handful of Ethereum since there was a decent dip in the price. I haven't spent much time on it and I have no good leads for program ideas yet, but if the code is buggy and I get hacked and lose my investment, that's fine. A smart contract is a project, and it could fail like any other.
Don't put your retirement savings in a smart contract right now unless you're OK with losing it all. Maybe in the future Ethereum will move beyond this phase, and maybe not. All the drama is ridiculous, everyone needs to chill out.
>"I've been holding a handful of Ethereum since there was a decent dip in the price. I haven't spent much time on it and I have no good leads for program ideas yet, but if the code is buggy and I get hacked and lose my investment, that's fine. A smart contract is a project, and it could fail like any other.
Don't put your retirement savings in a smart contract right now unless you're OK with losing it all. Maybe in the future Ethereum will move beyond this phase, and maybe not. All the drama is ridiculous, everyone needs to chill out."
This is the exact spiel we're all sick of hearing.
>I've been holding a handful of Ethereum since there was a decent dip in the price.
You opened by explain how you clearly have an interest in this, you got in, and since you are saying you bought during a "decent dip" that means you only got in recently.
The rest of your post would be shilling only that you disclosed your interest.
You toss out this pejorative description, and then in the next paragraph:
> When talking about engineering on such a critical subject, people should be way more responsible.
This is absurd. How could it ever become critical without a lot of research and development first?
I've been holding a handful of Ethereum since there was a decent dip in the price. I haven't spent much time on it and I have no good leads for program ideas yet, but if the code is buggy and I get hacked and lose my investment, that's fine. A smart contract is a project, and it could fail like any other.
Don't put your retirement savings in a smart contract right now unless you're OK with losing it all. Maybe in the future Ethereum will move beyond this phase, and maybe not. All the drama is ridiculous, everyone needs to chill out.