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October 2, 2023 at 6:18 am #3733winniecranwell6Participant
<br> Why should I get my money back from Binance? With standard lightning fees, you only get paid when liquidity is used. For example, rather than the streaming-sha256 approach in Elements, where you could write: “a” SHA256INITIALIZE “b” SHA256UPDATE “c” SHA256UPDATE “d” SHA256FINALIZE to get the sha256 of “abcd” without having to CAT them first (important if they’d potentially overflow the 520B stack item limit), in chia lisp you write: (sha256 “a” “b” “c” “d”) which still has the benefit of streaming the inputs into the function, but only adds a single opcode, doesn’t involve representing the internal sha256 midstate on the stack, and generally seems easier to understand, at least to me. I don’t think they’ve solved the broader problem, and thus I think it still makes more sense to stick with bitcoin’s current model here. The Bitcoin Core project operates an open contributor model where anyone is welcome to contribute towards development in the form of peer review, testing and patches. Every project has a different proposal, each with its own potential risks and benefits. A low margin balance can lead to liquidation, so it’s crucial to have enough margin to accommodate both the Funding Fee payments and potential losses<br>>
<br>> At Binance, we believe in the long-term potential of blockchain technology and recognize our duty of moving the whole ecosystem forward, encouraging the next impactful projects wherever they may emerge. This week’s newsletter announces the newest release of C-Lightning, briefly describes several proposals related to LN, 바이낸스 수수료 – mouse click the up coming website page – and provides our usual sections about bech32 sending support and notable changes to popular Bitcoin infrastructure projects. The 0.13.1 release endured extensive testing and research leading to some delays in its release date. See the release notes for more information about the many new features and bug fixes in this release. It is also expected that there will be a 0.21.1.1 release with an updated certificate when the problem is fixed. And while I’ve never really coded in lisp at all, my understanding is that its biggest problems are all about doing things efficiently at large scales — but script’s problem space is for very small scale things, so there’s at least reason to hope that any problems lisp might have won’t actually show up for this use case. The problem this company has is they offer an inbound liquidity service, but it is common after a user purchases liquidity, the channel goes unused.
That way a user with multiple wallets can backup all of them using just the super-keychain’s seed (plus the derivation paths and the library for transforming deterministic entropy into input data). It seems to end up equivalent to doing things in a list oriented way to me. Some terminals have a limit on the number of characters that can be added to stdin simultaneously (i.e. pasted), which made PSBTs over 4096 base64 characters (equivalent to 3.072 bytes of binary) unusable. This homoiconicity greatly tempts LISP programmers to use macros, i.e. programs that generate other programs from some input syntax. Of course, “defun” and “if” aren’t listed as opcodes above; instead you have a compiler that gives you nice macros like defun and translates them into correct uses of the “a” opcode, etc. As I understand it, those sort of macros and translations are pretty well understood across lisp-like languages, and, of course, they’re already implemented for chia lisp. If we were to adopt this, obviously we shouldn’t call it “chia lisp” anymore, since it wouldn’t work the same in important ways. A particular advantage of lisp-like approaches is that they treat code and data exactly the same — so if we’re trying to leave the option open for a transaction to supply some unexpected code on the witness stack, then lisp handles that really naturally: you were going to include data on the stack anyway, and code and data are the same, so you don’t have to do anything special at all.<br>>
To level-up from that, instead of putting byte strings on a stack, you could have some other data structure than a stack — eg one that allows nesting. The activation mechanism has been designed so that, by roughly mid August, it will either provide us with an assurance that we’ll soon have taproot or immediately give us valuable information that users and developers can use to make the next activation attempt more likely to succeed. If miners don’t lock in taproot by the end of the three month signaling period, a separate attempt to activate it using another mechanism is expected to be tried. If, during that time, 90% of blocks within a 2,016 retarget period signal readiness, taproot will be locked in and this version of Bitcoin Core will begin enforcing the additional consensus rules specified in BIPs 341 and 342 at block 709,632, which is expected in early or mid November. In the case where a user does not pay the fee, the company can take this as a signal that they are no longer interested in the service. Simple enough. Then, you plot this over the MACD line’s 9 EMA – the sig<br>line. -
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