>
> Oh, it did? When was that? I must have missed this excitement :)
>>
>
I would be very interested to learn more about this. It seems the steady
state load on the site is not very high:
https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin.org/pull/287
(Saivann ran Google Analytics on the site for a little while
Happy New Year to all the good people out there working hard to make
Bitcoin better than ever before.
Thank you!
On 1 January 2014 19:25, Melvin Carvalho wrote:
>
>
>
> On 1 January 2014 19:33, Mike Hearn wrote:
>
>> Bitcoin had an incredible year in 2013, and I very much enjoyed working
>> w
On 1 January 2014 19:33, Mike Hearn wrote:
> Bitcoin had an incredible year in 2013, and I very much enjoyed working
> with and meeting you all.
>
> I'm very much looking forward to some of the upgrades coming in 2014.
> Though a lot happened in the general community, last year was kind of quiet
Same here.
I feel incredibly lucky to know some of you, and to be able to contribute in
some small way to what this is ultimately becoming. It's been an amazing ride,
and I'm pretty sure that 2014 is going to totally blow our minds.
-wendell
hivewallet.com | twitter.com/hivewallet | pgp: B7179
Bitcoin had an incredible year in 2013, and I very much enjoyed working
with and meeting you all.
I'm very much looking forward to some of the upgrades coming in 2014.
Though a lot happened in the general community, last year was kind of quiet
with respect to the core software. I'm hoping this yea
That seems overly complicated, there's no need for the Bitcoin protocol to
be involved. Deterministic builds with threshold signed updates are a
problem the entire crypto community is now interested in solving - any
solution should be generic.
Really all you need is an update engine that allows a
>
> In any case, I think wallet users want to know when an upgrade is
> available, and ability to click an 'update' button get a binary they can
> trust. It's not a problem unique to bitcoind, deterministic builds are
> awesome, but I don't think fully solve it.
>
Deterministic builds are one part
So I looked into gitian, the first thing I noticed was the hashes that
people were signing, for example:
https://github.com/bitcoin/gitian.sigs/blob/master/0.8.6-win32/gavinandresen/bitcoin-build.assert
don't match the hash of the file 'bitcoin-0.8.6-win32-setup.exe' actually
hosted by s
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