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A Look at the First Phone-to-Phone Bitcoin Transfer Using a Nokia N900 Smartphone – Bitcoin News

A Look at the First Phone-to-Phone Bitcoin Transfer Using a Nokia 900 Smartphone

When Satoshi Nakamoto created Bitcoin, the full node client came with a wallet often referred to as Bitcoin-Qt. Nakamoto’s simplified payment verification (SPV) concept was not available until two years later, after the former Bitcoin Core developer Mike Hearn published BitcoinJ in 2011. However, prior to the first SPV client or optimized lightweight bitcoin wallet, the first phone-to-phone bitcoin transaction occurred more than 11 years ago on December 7, 2010.

Sending 0.42 Bitcoin From a Nokia N900 to Another Nokia N900 in 2010

Satoshi’s Bitcoin is nearing its 14-year anniversary, which will occur on January 3, 2023, and to date, the Bitcoin network has been functional 99.98777985271% of the time since its inception on January 3, 2009. During the first few years of Bitcoin’s life, the ecosystem had very little infrastructure compared to today’s plethora of crypto exchanges and bitcoin wallets. The protocol’s second Bitcoin client in the network’s history, Bitcoind was published on January 9, 2009, and prior to the announcement of BitcoinJ, everyone had to leverage a full node client, also known as Bitcoin-Qt.

However, prior to Mike Hearn announcing BitcoinJ on March 7, 2011, and before the SPV wallet model became super popular and leveraged on mobile phones, the first recorded phone-to-phone bitcoin transaction took place on December 7, 2010. At the time, the bitcointalk.org member called “Doublec,” published a post noting that he was able to get Bitcoind running on an N900 mobile phone crafted by Nokia. Doublec published his post at 5:47 a.m. (ET) and by 1:30 p.m., the bitcointalk.org member Ribuck explained he got Bitcoind running on his Nokia N900.

“This is so cool,” Ribuck responded. “I’ve installed it on my N900 and am up to block 2,000. I wonder what the khash/s will be — my guess is 50 khash/s. Let me know your bitcoin receiving address, and we can make the first p2p (phone-to-phone) transaction.”

A Look at the First Phone-to-Phone Bitcoin Transfer Using a Nokia 900 Smartphone
The N900 leverages the Linux-based OS Maemo 5, an operating system that was created for Nokia’s 770 Internet Tablet. “Programming for the N900 is generally done in C++ on a Linux PC using a cross-compiler,” Ribuck explains in the post published in December 2010.

Doublec responded and shared his bitcoin address with Ribuck and the rest of the forum. “I created [18T1j] on my phone,” Doublec remarked sharing his BTC address. “I’m interested in what the battery hit is like for running it full time. It did…

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