let’s discuss a bit about how public opinion can drive the value of a project and to what extent it can succeed or fail because of shill/fud. do u think a project can thrive based on the quality/promises of its products or by users perception? if a project looks appealing to you, how are you taking the final decision?
Yes, it’s about skycoin
>produces hardware
>hardware actually gets used
>Offers fast and reliable VPN services
>Allready generates a nice steady stream of income
>Completely new approach to local/community mesh networks that will spread as time progresses.
>Has several teams working on various platform integrations
>all headed by a genius mad lad that makes me laugh and feel comfy.
Fuck user... i went all in on this one 3 weeks ago. It's seriously giving me the early bitcoin vibes again.
Obviously, the project can’t exist if it has no supporters. if the project is good it will attract people
a loyal community for crypto projects can promote the biz in ways no amount of money can.
and more, I happily take part in threads where I can protect the project I believe in
Frogposting faggot and his faggot coin
Pajeet come on
>the devices are created for the public, later users
>>if the product sucks it will not work on the market, people will try it, give a feedback on social media platform, forums, etc
>>>negative feedback is failure for the product and also for the company - depends
>>>>positive feedback help the product to become better, get investments and so on
Now, Skycoin ecosystem depends on his community a lot, so yes, public opinion can bring value to a project.
Lol
as anyone can tell, public op is very easy to manipulate. u can sell shit having a good pr or u can fail and be swallowed by those who want to protect their own interest. if u re shit threatens em
We're almost to 7,000 nodes online: discovery.skycoin.net:8001
My comfiest hold and it's slowly taking over more and more of my portfolio.
if others ain't feeling threatened by u re shit then u suck at your biz. fudders are a good sign
Sigh, hey Roger.