14

Specifically, I need the easiest possible way to store Namecoins mined through merged mining, so the eWallet will have to deal well with generated transactions. Do any NMC eWallets actually exist? Do any of the exchanges deal well with generated transactions at receiving addresses?

1
  • 1
    DO NOT use Vircurex addresses for mining purposes. We cannot credit coins generated (instead of being send). what does this mean?
    – user4198
    Apr 10, 2013 at 22:40

5 Answers 5

6

I would recommend VirCurEx. You can use it as a wallet or trade between different currencies.

3
  • I just signed up and they have wallets for more cryptocurrencies than I even knew about. Feb 15, 2013 at 22:04
  • 1
    and we can't use the address generated by them for mining.
    – user4951
    Apr 14, 2013 at 23:55
  • This is absolutely horrible advice, do not use an exchange for a wallet.
    – Ron E
    Mar 24, 2014 at 21:17
2

You can park them at an exchange, such as BitParking:

As far as being able to use your BitParking deposit address for receiving generated coins directly when mining, I'm not sure.

[Edit: Also BTC-e.com might be useful as an NMC EWallet.]

1
  • 3
    Their deposit addresses are only good for 10 days, I wouldn't really consider that a viable e-wallet :P Jul 3, 2012 at 22:58
2

I would definitely recommend Vircurex. They support many different currencies, and real easy to set up.

1
  • 1
    DO NOT use Vircurex addresses for mining purposes. We cannot credit coins generated (instead of being send). - Warning
    – noob
    Apr 29, 2013 at 6:33
2

Just checked, and there is a significant lack of wallets just a few months later. The only one that seems active at all is the command-line wallet. The YouTube link below can help you identify the NMC wallet's address from the command prompt in Windows, and the other link is to the page where you can download the NMC wallet's software.

BTC-e.com doesn't have e-wallet capabilities. Their deposit addresses (as David Perry so helpfully pointed out) limits the duration of the deposit addresses, and you have to have a wallet to withdraw to.

I'm just waiting for someone to come out with a good GUI wallet that's easy to use and doesn't require programming knowledge to implement (source code is good, precompiled executables is better, and both is the best).

In just a year, we've gone from over a dozen clients to less than 4 which seem to be currently kept up.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezo1t90QLFQ - Very simple tutorial--TAKE NOTES!

http://dot-bit.org/ - Links are on the right-hand side of the main page.

0

As a developer, I find it sad that nobody has created a modular, extensible, multi-currency client.. Free or otherwise. From a technical level it's not much more than a network protocol, handler, peer manager and a handful of block crypto components. Honestly, all of the code we need is already available in multiple forms in just about every mainstream programming language.

These should be swappable/pluggable components by now.

I don't have the luxury of writing e-currency clients for free, otherwise I would take a stab at it or even join a team of people who feel the same way I do, but bills need to get paid. I imagine this is the same reason why no high-quality, polished GUIs exist for the dozen or more e-currencies that now exist. The money to support that kind of development is probably being squandered on 'the Thps race' instead. Heck, you could contract a small development team for as little as 5 BTC a week (at current exchange rates) all you need is a good manager and software engineer on deck. But, nobody has the chops (or the money/freedom) to do it. :(

2
  • 1) They would all need different blockchains, so you wouldn't really be saving much in the way of system resources. 2) 5 BTC a week works out to one full-time employee working at slightly above minimum wage.
    – Nick ODell
    May 13, 2013 at 0:44
  • I'll note that 5 BTC is now valued at 2500 USD to 7500 USD depending on time of trade and that this is enough to contract an entire team of talented programmers in several countries around the world. Further, merkle roots and partialized trees obviate the need for full blockchains, so long as they've been verified and are correct. While a full chain is still necessary to prove the entire network is valid, a partial chain is all that is required to implement a wallet and carry out a transaction for most cryptcoins to date. It comes down to trust. Dec 13, 2013 at 14:59

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.