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1 hour ago, Vaampire said:

Syncfab ico gurunchi telusa

SUMMARY:
👉 Promising supply-chain infrastructure/protocol ICO for Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT).
👉 Blockchain is the perfect technology for supply-chain ICOs (like WaBi, ShipChain or SyncFab).
👉 SyncFab helps hardware manufacturers & purchasers to cut out the middle men, protect intellectual property and source & track parts in real-time on-demand.

TOKEN METRICS:
🔵 Softcap: $15M USD (15k ETH)
🔵 Hardcap: $30M USD (33k ETH)
🔵 Total supply: 1B
💰 Token price: 1 ETH = 5,000 MFG ~ $0.20, plus our bonus/discount on top
🗓 Public main sale: Feb 15
 
SMART MANUFACTURING BLOCKCHAIN:
🌐 The first P2P Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) manufacturing blockchain (a B2B ecosystem)
🛠 Manufacturers list their machining capabilities on the platform and hardware buyers send part orders directly to them
🤝 Smart contracts guarantee production standards, protect intellectual property and guarantee payments
👍 SyncFab increases efficiency & security of the whole manufacturing process and solves multiple problems plaguing the industry
 
INFRASTRUCTURE & PROTOCOL:
🚀 SyncFab serves as an early adopter, protocol developer and integrator of smart contracts into the manufacturing supply chain blockchain. It aims to have new partner blockchains and protocols built on top of it.
⚫️ The ERC-20 MFG token plays a vital role as a value sharing system of the SyncFab platform, used to pay for order quotes. In the future users will be able to unlock and update Smart Contracts and pay transaction fees.

GROWING MARKET DEMAND:
💥 US companies are investing heavily in IIoT technologies, with spending estimated to be around $20 billion in 2012 and an approximate projection of $500 billion by 2020
🔼 27,000 U.S. machine shops, growing each year
👨👩👧👦 133M AliBaba users (Chinese offshore manufacturing)
🏭 SyncFab is perfectly positioned to be in middle of the fourth industrial revolution, aiming to connect IoT and the IIoT

ROADMAP:
2️⃣ MFG token will be adopted in Q2 2018 into the existing 2.0 platform
🌕 In 2019, SyncFab 3.0 Decentralized Smart Manufacturing Blockchain Platform will be launched
 
COMPANY & TEAM:
👨 CEO Jeremy Goodwin: Built an industrial company to peak 2000 employees & NASDAQ IPO. Fluent in Chinese.
🦅 US based Inc. (Founded & HQ in Silicon Valley)
🖥 Established in 2013, developing an online decentralized buyer-to-manufacturer platform
🏅 SyncFab is the San Francisco Mayor's Office of Civic Innovation 2016 Startup in Residence
🤝 Partner to the $140MM US D.O.E. & D.O.C. Clean Energy Smart Manufacturing Innovation Initiative (CESMII) appointed by the White House and US Departments of Energy and Commerce National Network for Manufacturing Innovation (NNMI)

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16 hours ago, hello123000 said:

do you guys think crypto currencies will be recognized like global currency in the future sometimes naku idhi too unrealistic anipistadi like future lo idhi success avvacha where ppl will use it on a day to day basis..there are too many coins out there with no real value and noreal usage and just a lofty white paper .emantaru folks? the value keeps fluctuating a lot and lot of ppl are staying away from it..what do you guys think?

https://www.coindesk.com/arizona-senators-pass-bitcoin-tax-payments-bill/

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6 hours ago, Sreeven said:

May be not now but this will grow. Look at block chain technology and how real companies working on it. Banks can stop up to one level, but cant control fully. Usa Japan and Russia supporting crypto. Don't think it  as a currency think it as a technology for future transactions

block chain technology is great no doubt about it but we are talking about crypto trading and ICO's. present crypto reminds me the dot com bubble in 200-2002 same to same ayyindhi,  internet based ey company vachina janam full ga invest cheseysaaru money just .com domain tho vasthey chaalu . Read below article @3$% .com place lo crypto pettuko IPO place lo ICO pettuko atleast IPO and exchanges are regulated by govt and rules. crypto lo adhi kuda ledhu 

 

What was the 'Dotcom Bubble'

The dotcom bubble occurred in the late 1990s and was characterized by a rapid rise in equity markets fueled by investments in Internet-based companies. During the dotcom bubble, the value of equity markets grew exponentially, with the technology-dominated NASDAQ index rising from under 1,000 to more than 5,000 between 1995 and 2000.

BREAKING DOWN 'Dotcom Bubble'

The dotcom bubble grew out of a combination of the presence of speculative or fad-based investing, the abundance of venture capital funding for startups and the failure of dotcoms to turn a profit. Investors poured money into Internet startups during the 1990s in the hope that those companies would one day become profitable, and many investors and venture capitalists abandoned a cautious approach for fear of not being able to cash in on the growing use of the Internet.

How the Dotcom Bubble Burst

The 1990s was a period of rapid technological advancement in many areas, but it was the commercialization of the Internet that led to the greatest expansion of capital growth the country had ever seen. Although high-tech standard bearers, such as Intel, Cisco, and Oracle were driving the organic growth in the technology sector, it was the upstartdotcom companies that fueled the stock market surge that began in 1995.

The bubble that formed over the next five years was fed by cheap money, easy capital, market overconfidence and pure speculation. Venture capitalists anxious to find the next big score freely invested in any company with a “.com” after its name. Valuations were based on earnings and profits that would not occur for several years if the business modelactually worked, and investors were all too willing to overlook traditional fundamentals. Companies that had yet to generate revenue, profits and, in some cases, a finished product, went to market with initial public offerings that saw their stock prices triple and quadruple in one day, creating a feeding frenzy for investors.

The NASDAQ index peaked on March 10, 2000, at 5048, nearly double over the prior year. Right at the market’s peak, several of the leading high-tech companies, such as Dell and Cisco placed huge sell orders on their stocks, sparking panic selling among investors. Within a few weeks, the stock market lost 10% of its value. As investment capital began to dry up, so did the life blood of cash-strapped dotcom companies. Dotcom companies that had reached market capitalization in the hundreds of millions of dollars became worthless within a matter of months. By the end of 2001, a majority of publicly traded dotcom companies folded, and trillions of dollars of investment capital evaporated.



Read more: Dotcom Bubble https://www.investopedia.com/terms/d/dotcom-bubble.asp#ixzz56qimThpo 
Follow us: Investopedia on Facebook

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1 hour ago, tom bhayya said:

block chain technology is great no doubt about it but we are talking about crypto trading and ICO's. present crypto reminds me the dot com bubble in 200-2002 same to same ayyindhi,  internet based ey company vachina janam full ga invest cheseysaaru money just .com domain tho vasthey chaalu . Read below article @3$% .com place lo crypto pettuko IPO place lo ICO pettuko atleast IPO and exchanges are regulated by govt and rules. crypto lo adhi kuda ledhu 

 

What was the 'Dotcom Bubble'

The dotcom bubble occurred in the late 1990s and was characterized by a rapid rise in equity markets fueled by investments in Internet-based companies. During the dotcom bubble, the value of equity markets grew exponentially, with the technology-dominated NASDAQ index rising from under 1,000 to more than 5,000 between 1995 and 2000.

BREAKING DOWN 'Dotcom Bubble'

The dotcom bubble grew out of a combination of the presence of speculative or fad-based investing, the abundance of venture capital funding for startups and the failure of dotcoms to turn a profit. Investors poured money into Internet startups during the 1990s in the hope that those companies would one day become profitable, and many investors and venture capitalists abandoned a cautious approach for fear of not being able to cash in on the growing use of the Internet.

How the Dotcom Bubble Burst

The 1990s was a period of rapid technological advancement in many areas, but it was the commercialization of the Internet that led to the greatest expansion of capital growth the country had ever seen. Although high-tech standard bearers, such as Intel, Cisco, and Oracle were driving the organic growth in the technology sector, it was the upstartdotcom companies that fueled the stock market surge that began in 1995.

The bubble that formed over the next five years was fed by cheap money, easy capital, market overconfidence and pure speculation. Venture capitalists anxious to find the next big score freely invested in any company with a “.com” after its name. Valuations were based on earnings and profits that would not occur for several years if the business modelactually worked, and investors were all too willing to overlook traditional fundamentals. Companies that had yet to generate revenue, profits and, in some cases, a finished product, went to market with initial public offerings that saw their stock prices triple and quadruple in one day, creating a feeding frenzy for investors.

The NASDAQ index peaked on March 10, 2000, at 5048, nearly double over the prior year. Right at the market’s peak, several of the leading high-tech companies, such as Dell and Cisco placed huge sell orders on their stocks, sparking panic selling among investors. Within a few weeks, the stock market lost 10% of its value. As investment capital began to dry up, so did the life blood of cash-strapped dotcom companies. Dotcom companies that had reached market capitalization in the hundreds of millions of dollars became worthless within a matter of months. By the end of 2001, a majority of publicly traded dotcom companies folded, and trillions of dollars of investment capital evaporated.



Read more: Dotcom Bubble https://www.investopedia.com/terms/d/dotcom-bubble.asp#ixzz56qimThpo 
Follow us: Investopedia on Facebook

adhe kadha everyone is referring to it as bubble but at the same time there is much hype around the block chain technology and the crypto coins..govt regulations aithe oka rakam ga manchidhe atleast ppl will feel confident ankuntunna that could make more ppl invest in it since they might think that govt backing undhi ani..ala ani lite le ani ignore chesdam ante . FOMO full undhi..long term investment ki naku telsi idhi reliable kadhu ankutunna.

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1 hour ago, hello123000 said:

adhe kadha everyone is referring to it as bubble but at the same time there is much hype around the block chain technology and the crypto coins..govt regulations aithe oka rakam ga manchidhe atleast ppl will feel confident ankuntunna that could make more ppl invest in it since they might think that govt backing undhi ani..ala ani lite le ani ignore chesdam ante . FOMO full undhi..long term investment ki naku telsi idhi reliable kadhu ankutunna.

Ppl who have invested heavily on crypto do not want to hear r discuss about y it will not succeed, bcos thry believed so strongly n invested heavily on it, 

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8 minutes ago, MuPaGuNa said:

evaro db lo free tokens vesaru anukunta u cash meeda.........

Carvertical ila  periginte  naa loss recover ayyedhi...daridram bayya..konnavi  peragav..konanivi peruguthayi

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3 minutes ago, mad_foodie said:

Carvertical ila  periginte  naa loss recover ayyedhi...daridram bayya..konnavi  peragav..konanivi peruguthayi

prl kuda 2 days back konchem erigindi ,malli padipoyindi...choodali sub prl edo okati konchem lesthe oka 1k profit ayina vasthademo

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21 minutes ago, perugu_vada said:

Ppl who have invested heavily on crypto do not want to hear r discuss about y it will not succeed, bcos thry believed so strongly n invested heavily on it, 

may be thia could be the reason 

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