bitcoin doge exchange

_ Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top up vote 2 down vote favorite I have the dogecoin daemon running successfully on Ubuntu, started with this command: dogecoind -daemon It's listening on port 22556, as verified by netstat.I can also pass commands to it directly via the Ubuntu terminal, like so: dogecoind getinfo However, passing RPC requests to it through HTTP does not work.The daemon doesn't refuse the connection (and I can verify that it does refuse the connection if I use a port other than 22556); instead, the connection hangs, with no data being sent to the client making the HTTP request.Directly connecting to http://a:b@127.0.0.1:22556/ makes the web browser sit and wait for data.Similarly, making an RPC request via a PHP script, and then accessing that script in a browser, makes the browser wait for 30 second before PHP spits out an error stating that the maximum execution time of 30 seconds was exceeded.

I have my ~/.dogecoin/dogecoin.conf file as such: server=1 rpcuser=a rpcpassword=b (I know the username and password I typed there are insecure; those are temporary until I can at least make a connection.)I've tried adding the line rpcallowip=127.0.0.1 to the end of the config file, but that didn't change the behavior at all.What am I doing wrong -- why isn't my Dogecoin daemon accepting RPC requests (or any from-an-actual-browser HTTP requests, for that matter)?edit: Also, I can verify that the daemon is caught up with the blockchain.daemon dogecoin up vote 1 down vote Figured it out.It had to do with adding rpcallowip lines to the config file.Adding these three lines solved it: rpcallowip=127.0.0.1 rpcallowip=192.168.1.* rpcallowip=0.0.0.0 The last line is what eventually allowed it to work.I'm not sure why, but netstat said it was listening on 0.0.0.0:22556, so adding 0.0.0.0 to the rpcallowip list solved it.Browse other questions tagged daemon dogecoin or ask your own question.

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Promote DirectBet on websites and forums, refer your family and friends, and earn up to a whopping 1% on all bets placed by your referrals, won or lost, for life !All the advantages of a betting exchange without the complicity or liquidity issues.I would rephrase the question as 'Does the world need a better currency, a better payment system, or both?'The currency questionBitcoin and Dogecoin are examples of decentralized currencies, akin to dollars, Euros, etc.For these currencies to succeed, the people you want to exchange money with must use the same currency.The benefit is fast and cheap (sometimes) payments.Cheap is 'sometimes' because if these people don't use the same currency, you have to have someone in between who will buy your currency in exchange for the currency that the other people do want to receive.Payment processors like Coinbase and BitPay exist because some merchants want to accept Bitcoin, but want to ultimately receive dollars.These processors charge transaction fees and provide their own FX/currency-conversion rates.The payment system questionRipple (payment network) is an example of a decentralized payment network, akin to ACH, SWIFT, or other interbank payment systems.

For this system to succeed, you can deal in any currency you want (USD, EUR, BTC, LTC...), and the people you want to exchange money with can deal in any currency that they want.The benefit is also fast and cheap payments.Since Ripple supports both the movement and conversion of currencies, you don't need to rely on a centralized payment processor.Instead, you get access to open-market FX exchange rates, and you don't get charged transaction fees.The both questionThe fundamental difference between the success of currencies vs.payment systems is coexistence.In a Bitcoin-only world, Dogecoin, USD, EUR... these other currencies can't exist.However, in a Ripple-only world, any currency - all of the above and whatever else you can think of - can continue to exist.Yggdrasil LinuxSlackwarerightFirst of all, you have to define carefully what you mean by a success.In the case of a startup, it's possible for that startup to be bought out, for the technology set later to be replaced by something else newer and better, and then for everyone to go home rich and happy.

With a protocol like Bitcoin, there is no possibility for a buy out or conversion.It's that protocol "for life."It's a bit like having stock in 8-track or VHS or DVD or Blueray.Even though there are way better formats, VCR is still worth something tiny.Even though there are better formats, DVD has enough market share to be locked in.In the case of digital currency you are looking at a variety of potential use cases, each of which depend on the strengths of the technology set AND the network effect.So there's an obvious "first mover" advantage on the basis of a certain benefit, like resilience (see: the problems Bitcoin doesn't solve ), but with a distinct possibility that a new comer with better execution can displace it.In the case of currency in particular, because it is a fairly essential and important aspect of our lives, we usually expect accountability when it comes to the issuance.That's why I'm extraordinarily excited by things like Distributed Autonomous Society made possible by the blockchain, the smart-contract possibilities of Ethereum, and what we are doing at Evergreen.