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BitFlyer Adds Computer Language Co-Creator as Advisor

Bitflyer adds computer language co-creator as advisor

BitFlyer Adds Computer Language Co-Creator as Advisor

Bitflyer adds computer language co-creator as advisor

BitFlyer has hired the co-creator of a programming language as an advisor to help with its scaling and enterprise blockchain efforts.

Tom Love, co-creator of the programming language Objective-C – perhaps most notably used by Apple for its OSX and iOS operating systems – will advise the cryptocurrency startup on both strategic and technology initiatives, chief operating officer Bartek Ringweski told CoinDesk in an interview.

Ringweski said bitFlyer particularly hopes to leverage Love’s experience in order to help it build on its ‘miyabi’ private blockchain, which he called “the fastest blockchain in the world” capable of handling 2,000 to 4,000 transactions per second.

The company now hopes to create a “programming language that would let developers interact with miyabi, and that is more familiar to them as if it were a traditional database,” Ringweski explained.

Asked what this language might look like, Love told CoinDesk:

“I have a strong bias toward things that are simple, clear and easy to understand, and that are successful. So I hope to help bitFlyer in exactly those same ways.”

Love started his career at General Electric Company and has also held executive management positions at ITT, IBM and Morgan Stanley, but the role at bitFlyer will be his first endeavor in the blockchain industry.

Despite this, Love said the company is a natural fit.

“I’ve had a history of connecting myself with important technologies dating back to the 1970s, and this looked like a similarly important and significant technology,” he said.

Ringweski said Love’s experience will help the company expand, though it already offers exchange services in 43 U.S. states, Japan and the EU.

“He’s a great person to help us on the technical front, but we can also benefit from his experience on the business and regulatory side,” Ringweski said. “He’s worked in highly regulated spaces.”

“I have a history of working inside large companies and starting small companies that have made a difference,” Love explained to CoinDesk, adding:

“So, I have a wealth of experience and a wealth of contracts that I can call upon to be helpful to the company in a variety of ways, like I’ve been for other companies in the past.”

Businessman miniature on motherboard image via Shutterstock

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is a media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk is an independent operating subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups.

Published at Thu, 05 Apr 2018 23:00:08 +0000

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Bitwala Sees ‘Steep’ Bitcoin Adoption in Developing Countries

The latest data from bitcoin remittance app Bitwala reveals a growing trend in bitcoin adoption among citizens of developing countries.


‘Steep Adoption Rate’

Bitwala, a bitcoin-based remittance app, shared some user statistics in its blog post yesterday in which we can see that bitcoin is becoming increasingly popular in certain developing countries. The blog post reveals a “steep adoption rate” in developing countries both from Africa and Asia, the two continents with the highest number of unbanked citizens.

Bitwala reveals that, while their early adopters came from Europe and North America, the total number of sign ups from developing countries is catching up to those of Europe and the U.S, making up approximately 30% of new signups globally.

Among the developing countries, most are from North Africa, a region that makes up for 4.4% of its website’s visitors.

This growing trend among developing countries, where financial exclusion is the norm, reveals a growing need for the citizens of these countries to interact with the world economy and to access financial services, typically provided by banks. However, these regions are also the ones where banking service fees are the highest.

Bitwala explains:

At a cost of $4 billion per year, international transfers to Africa are the most expensive in the world. Furthermore, online and offline businesses also continue to pay a steep price for transferring money abroad or even domestically as the majority of banks charge between 10-19% on any transfers to, from and within African countries.

bitcoin for the Unbanked

According to Bitwala, banks are not concerned with financial inclusion and prefer instead to charge higher fees in places where financial services are harder to access, taking full advantage of their monopoly in underbanked regions.

Africa mobile

This is one of the reasons why bitcoin is regarded as a game-changer by some. It has the ability to bypass middlemen bank, enabling direct value transfer while empowering users while giving people more control over their money.

“The strength of bitcoin and the blockchain technology that it relies on is that it allows you to send money across borders without paying the steep fees charged by traditional gatekeepers like Western Union, MoneyGram, Ria and others,” Bitwala explains.

According to 21.co, the cheapest transaction fee for a bitcoin transaction is currently at around $0.50, or 0.0003616 btc. While, admittedly, not ideal for microtransactions, it’s still cheaper than the 10-19% charged by banks on “any transfers to, from and within African countries.”

But bitcoin is not only about cheaper remittances. It also gives people access to a growing number of financial services including e-commerce, peer-to-peer loans, and money management platforms, provided they have access to an internet connection.

networking

As more and more people in these regions become aware of bitcoin and its ability to empower them and to give them access to financial services globally and at much lower costs, bitcoin will continue to attract users.

“People often say necessity is the mother of invention but I like to say necessity is also the mother of adoption,” Lightning CEO Elizabeth Stark says in the new documentary Blockchain and Us.

If there is a real use case that people need a technology for, they start using it.

Can bitcoin help citizens in developing countries achieve financial prosperity? Let us know what you think in the comment section.


Images courtesy of Bitwala, Shutterstock

The post Bitwala Sees ‘Steep’ Bitcoin Adoption in Developing Countries appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.