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/biz/ - Business & Finance


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7987819 No.7987819 [Reply] [Original]

The rebrand went as expected; everything is still fueled by speculation at this point. With the mainnet launching in June and THOR's introduction, how much do you think partnered companies will actually value either currency?

As adoption grows and the derived value shifts from speculation to application, does anyone have any solid guesstimates on what prices could do?

>> No.7988456

Vet 100 / Thor 35 EOY.

>> No.7988881

https://youtu.be/j013PkHF1ns

>> No.7988888

>>7987819

gay coin

>> No.7988973

Vet 35/ Thor 100

>> No.7989002
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7989002

The essential difference between Vechain and Walton is the layer at which the blockchain is implemented. Walton has patents on the txID-reading RFID chips with memory, which allows the blockchain to be implemented in the foundational level through the RFIDs. They are world leaders in chip technology, and make their own chips. Vechain does not make their own chips. They outsource the hardware, and have the hardware made compatible with their blockchain via API. So their blockchain is implemented several layers up in the application layer, through business-centralized control. So, Vechain is inherently less decentralized and less secure.

This is the essential difference, and it's not a deal-breaker for Vechain, but it is a fact, and it does matter. Walton is somewhat ironically better at authentication than Vechain for this reason, despite Vechain's original main use-case as an anti-counterfeiting product (they've since expanded their use-case into cold logistics and other areas).

But there are other advantages to making your own chips. Vechain is using someone else's hardware and then repurposing it for their blockchain. Walton has built the chip from the ground up to be compatible with the blockchain and improved the standard chip to be much more advanced, with encryption, fine minute movement detection, anti-collision logic to prevent skipping, low voltage technology so the chips can last more than 20 years, and other advancements over standard chips. Making their own chips also makes them cheaper. Standard RFIDs are 15 to 20 cents. Walton's are less than 5..

>> No.7989317
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7989317

>>7989002

>> No.7989349

>>7989002
Please buy my bleeding walton bags is all i got from this

>> No.7989565

>>7988456
Only if they are able to buy another $500 nfc sticker printer.