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View Full Version : RainWallet – The step towards creating world’s first global currency!



Tulsi Parek
2017-10-20, 08:52 PM
With ICOs coming like rain, it is very hard to decide but now with RainWallet, it is all going to be easy for you making the decisive decision. It’s built around the concept that makes the cryptocurrency revolution accessible to every person on this planet!

With such global idea, it will uniformly distribute a smart contract wallet preloaded with self leveling tokens to populations that have previously been in economic circumstances below the threshold needed to take part in the blockchain economy. And, thanks to that it will enable people have access to technologies needed to enter the token marketplace, it will remove disadvantage that usually new entries have!

The formula for this is simple and that’s about 100 tokens created for every wallet, but the point to note is that no tokens are sold instead we are would be buying smart contract! So with so many features and benefits, it is truly the way toward for the glorifying the future!

So come forward and become part of this victory momentum http://rainwallet.com/

sidrazafar
2017-10-20, 09:01 PM
In the 17th and 18th century, the use of silver Spanish dollars or "pieces of eight" spread from the Spanish territories in the Americas westwards to Asia and eastwards to Europe forming the first worldwide currency.[1][2] Spain's political supremacy on the world stage, the importance of Spanish commercial routes across the Atlantic and the Pacific, and the coin's quality and purity of silver helped it become internationally accepted for over two centuries. It was legal tender in Spain's Pacific territories of the Philippines, Micronesia, Guam and the Caroline Islands and later in China and other Southeast Asian countries until the mid-19th century. In the Americas it was legal tender in all of South and Central America (except Brazil) as well as in the US and Canada until the mid-19th century. In Europe the Spanish dollar was legal tender in the Iberian Peninsula, in most of Italy including: Milan, the Kingdom of Naples, Sicily, Sardinia, the Franche-Comté (France), and in the Spanish Netherlands. It was also used in other European states including the Austrian Habsburg territories.