19
6
What are the differences between the Bitcoin and Litecoin algorithms and protocol?
19
6
What are the differences between the Bitcoin and Litecoin algorithms and protocol?
20
Litecoin is exactly like Bitcoin, but:
Other differences are cosmetic, like aiming to generate more Litecoins than there will be Bitcoins, using different port, etc.
2As far as I understand litecoin is less about denying GPU mining over CPU, but making stuff like ASICs not really viable. A by product of that is that GPUs don't have much advantage over CPUs. – placeybordeaux – 2013-02-24T18:32:07.673
More like making ASICs more expensive. There's no way to make them not viable and still have an algorithm runnable on standard PCs. – eMansipater – 2013-05-06T23:47:24.503
3What is the advantage of the "faster" blocks? Is the generally accepted confirmation interval now 24 blocks (or still only six)? – Thilo – 2011-11-03T11:46:15.277
Faster blocks mainly generate faster, but one should be careful, since it is easier to manipulate them to harm the users. As for how many confirmations is accepted, it all depends on the client implementation and the users, not necessary the algorithm itself. Interesting question though. – ThePiachu – 2011-11-03T11:54:51.310
One advantage is that if you only care about 1 confirmation, you have to wait an average of 2.5 minutes, instead of 10. You'll get less security in these 2.5 minutes, but more security than if you don't wait to any confirmations. – ripper234 – 2011-11-03T12:29:27.627
1
If you just care for faster blocks, you should check out answer to this question: http://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/1557/speed-of-operations-in-the-bitcoin-network . Apparently Geist Gelt tries to keep their block generation at about 1 block per 15 seconds.
– ThePiachu – 2011-11-03T12:36:56.4231
ThePiachu Good link with lots of interesting references. @Thilo You are correct: if you want to have the same level of security you need to wait for 24 blocks. What matters here is time (1 hour) and not the number of blocks. This question may also interest you.
– nmat – 2011-11-03T13:00:38.9501@nmat for >0 confirms you no need to wait an equivelent amount of time. The one (and small IMHO) advantage of faster block is that any confirmations are better than 0 confirmation and the confirmation window is reduced in smaller blocks. That small advantage doesn't in my opinion outweigh the other costs of faster block time. – DeathAndTaxes – 2011-11-03T13:10:00.493
2@theUnhandledException To minimize probability of successful double-spend by an agent with <50% of the hashrate for an unlimited amount of time, what matters it the number of blocks, not the amount of time. – Meni Rosenfeld – 2011-11-03T14:17:03.247
Litecoin is no longer CPU only. – B Seven – 2012-09-30T14:19:34.003