Bitcoin
Bitcoin is a cryptocurrency developed by Satoshi Nakamoto in 2009. Bitcoin is used as a digital payment system. Rather than use traditional currency (USD, YEN, EURO, etc.) individuals may trade in, or even mine Bitcoin. It is a peer-to-peer system, and transactions may take place between users directly.
Here are 10,761 public repositories matching this topic...
AI сrypto trading on Binance, Huobi
-
Updated
May 23, 2024 - Python
Bitcoin Auto Withdraw is a tool designed to automate Bitcoin withdrawals to a specified address upon receiving funds in a Bitcoin wallet. The tool tracks transfers to a specific address and forwards them automatically.
-
Updated
May 23, 2024 - C#
Personal README.md
-
Updated
May 23, 2024 - Python
CoinWatch is an Android cryptocurrency app providing real-time coin prices, price histories, and market data, built using the latest Android architecture components
-
Updated
May 23, 2024 - Kotlin
Edge React Native GUI for iOS and Android
-
Updated
May 23, 2024 - TypeScript
Core Lightning — Lightning Network implementation focusing on spec compliance and performance
-
Updated
May 23, 2024 - C
Backend for sphinx tribes and bounties. The bounty platform pays out in bitcoin. Sign up with Sphinx Chat, complete a bounty, and earn bitcoin! Go to our website for available bounties.
-
Updated
May 23, 2024 - Go
Bitcoin Core integration/staging tree
-
Updated
May 23, 2024 - C++
A portfolio tracking, analytics, accounting and management application that protects your privacy
-
Updated
May 23, 2024 - Python
Backup of issues and pull-requests from bitcoin/bitcoin
-
Updated
May 23, 2024
Backup of issues and pull-requests from bitcoin-core/gui
-
Updated
May 23, 2024
Backup of issues and pull-requests from bitcoin/bips
-
Updated
May 23, 2024
Backup of issues and pull-requests from bitcoin-core/secp256k1
-
Updated
May 23, 2024
Created by Satoshi Nakamoto
Released January 3, 2009
Latest release about 1 month ago
- Followers
- 67.1k followers
- Repository
- bitcoin/bitcoin
- Website
- bitcoin.org/en
- Wikipedia
- Wikipedia