Re: Slashdot Submission for 1.0
Satoshi critiques a Slashdot submission draft, rejecting the 'anonymous' framing and 'stable-with-respect-to-energy' claims, noting how hard it is to describe Bitcoin for general audiences.
4 entries
Satoshi critiques a Slashdot submission draft, rejecting the 'anonymous' framing and 'stable-with-respect-to-energy' claims, noting how hard it is to describe Bitcoin for general audiences.
Bitcoin v0.3 was released on SourceForge with JSON-RPC control, a daemon version, Mac OS X support, and 20% faster hashing, coinciding with the famous Slashdot posting.
Slashdot, one of the most influential technology news sites at the time, published an article about Bitcoin v0.3. The resulting 'Slashdot effect' caused a massive surge in downloads and new users, marking Bitcoin's first significant mainstream tech media exposure.
Jeff Garzik, one of Bitcoin's earliest core developers, reflects on his experience working directly with Satoshi Nakamoto. He discovered Bitcoin through a Slashdot post in July 2010 and became one of the top three contributors to Bitcoin's codebase.