Interesting idea. But wouldn't this whole endeavor require ridiculous
amounts of memory?
On Jul 23, 2014 6:08 AM, "Markus Teufelberger" <[email protected]>
wrote:

> As far as I understand "triple entry accounting" it extends the 2 standard
> entries from "double entry" by a third "transaction ID" entry that is part
> of a larger system which (ideally) is public knowledge and can be
> independently verified.
>
> This poses a few interesting opportunities but also potential issues:
> Bitcoin for example has until now close to 43 million transactions
> recorded [https://blockchain.info/charts/n-transactions-total] (and some
> of them are not easily decoded or meaningful, so it can be a bit of a
> hassle to account for them correctly, but that's besides the point). If
> there were a way to encode this dataset into ledger (e.g. transactions
> between "Bitcoin:1abcdaddress" accounts) and then referencing the
> transactions/addresses in your actual private ledger, this could be of use
> for additional validation of transactions you enter, something like having
> the entire transaction database of your bank so you can finally make
> sense/use of that transaction ID.
>
> Also it might be a good thing to see some edge/extreme cases of ledger
> usage (e.g. calculating all balances of all addresses from Bitcoin genesis
> until now) with real world data...
>
> Are there actually some hard limits on what ledger can handle (Bitcoin
> transactions are already ~20 GB in binary format, if they get a bit
> expanded to fit into the text format of ledger, they might likely grow
> beyond 100 GB) size wise? Even outputs of a balance command would be
> several dozen MB of data.
>
> All in all it at least sounds like an interesting experiment - I however
> first would like to have some comments about feasability (I know that
> reading the data alone would take quite a bit of time, even from SSDs) and
> ideas where this might be going (some look-aside database that includes all
> transactions, similar to the currency conversion stuff, that gets only
> queried if there is a reference in the actual "private" ledger?).
>
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