Sorta it does make me slight more bitter about bitcoin in general, and if I made millions of dollars off of it I would likely thing it's the best thing in the world.
However, I do try to self adjust for that bias. When I mined the coins it was a neat concept, but bitcoin wasn't at all practical then and it isn't at all practical now.
I sold it all back then for a few reasons.
- I believed other tech nerds would come to the same conclusion.
- It would never reach main stream adoption because of how utterly impractical it actually is.
- I thought that governments would crack down on it pretty hard, pushing it further into the fringe communities.
I was definitely wrong about governments cracking down and the novelty of bitcoin has definitely caught the interest of many and that has caused many chain reactions of the price going up.
I still think bitcoin is basically useless, but I severely didn't properly estimate that just it being interesting would make it so valuable.
Bitcoin truly is extremely interesting, and the vast majority don't try to understand it at all. So while it may in fact be useless, that does not actually matter for the price to go up.
In the end the only thing I kick myself for was looking at it objectively. Bitcoin wasting untold amount of energy, low transaction rate, high wait times for confirmation, high transaction fees, ever growing public transaction history, long cryptographic identifiers for receiving and sending, and so on do not actually matter.
Not rebuying is because I still have hope that people will come to their senses. But my stubbornness has not made me rich.
> In the end the only thing I kick myself for was looking at it objectively. Bitcoin wasting untold amount of energy, low transaction rate, high wait times for confirmation, high transaction fees, ever growing public transaction history, long cryptographic identifiers for receiving and sending, and so on do not actually matter.
However, I do try to self adjust for that bias. When I mined the coins it was a neat concept, but bitcoin wasn't at all practical then and it isn't at all practical now.
I sold it all back then for a few reasons.
- I believed other tech nerds would come to the same conclusion.
- It would never reach main stream adoption because of how utterly impractical it actually is.
- I thought that governments would crack down on it pretty hard, pushing it further into the fringe communities.
I was definitely wrong about governments cracking down and the novelty of bitcoin has definitely caught the interest of many and that has caused many chain reactions of the price going up.
I still think bitcoin is basically useless, but I severely didn't properly estimate that just it being interesting would make it so valuable.
Bitcoin truly is extremely interesting, and the vast majority don't try to understand it at all. So while it may in fact be useless, that does not actually matter for the price to go up.
In the end the only thing I kick myself for was looking at it objectively. Bitcoin wasting untold amount of energy, low transaction rate, high wait times for confirmation, high transaction fees, ever growing public transaction history, long cryptographic identifiers for receiving and sending, and so on do not actually matter.
Not rebuying is because I still have hope that people will come to their senses. But my stubbornness has not made me rich.