Dell Welcomes Bitcoin Payments with Open Arms in Canada and the UK
In what seems to be the big news (and more importantly, validation that bitcoin is being seen as currency among big businesses), Dell has recently announced that it is expanding its bitcoin payments option to all customers in the UK and Canada. Company CIO Paul Walsh made the official announcement last week at eTail West (an annual commerce conference), and West cites customer enthusiasm for bitcoin payments as the "primary prompter" behind the company's decision to expand its bitcoin payments program: "We're hearing from our customers around the world that they want the option to use....
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Updated with comment from Dell CIO Paul Walsh. Dell has announced it has expanded its bitcoin payments program to consumers in the UK and Canada. The announcement was revealed today at eTail West, an annual e-commerce conference, during a keynote address by CIO Paul Walsh. In remarks, Walsh suggested that the decision was prompted by customer demand and the positive feedback the company had so far received for its US offering. Walsh said: "We're hearing from our customers around the world that they want the option to use bitcoin when buying Dell products, so we are excited to deliver....
Bitcoin has met few centralized establishment entities who are welcoming it with open arms. Countries like Russia, Ecuador, and Bangladesh have moved to ban it through regulation while countries like Canada and Australia take a more deliberate, and less fearful approach. Italy is taking a very original approach when it comes to what Bitcoin means to them and their central bank's monetary policy. On January 30th, The Central Bank of Italy made an official statement on digital currencies, granting the use of crypto-currencies as legal within the country. Italy Welcomes Bitcoin. Any Strings....
Not to be outdone by the likes of Newegg, TigerDirect, and Overstock.com, Michael Dell took to twitter today to announce the acceptance of Bitcoin at Dell.com. Coinbase followed with a blogpost announcing their newest and largest partner to date. The Texas-based, privately-owned company dwarfs resellers such as the aforementioned companies with over 100,000 employees employed worldwide and over $60 billion USD in annual sales. So far, Michael Dell hasn't said anything about paying any of his workers with Bitcoin; however, it is only a matter of time before he faces internal pressure to do....
Dell was among the very first major companies to experiment with Bitcoin payments at an early stage. Over the years, a fair amount of Bitcoin users have been using digital currency to pay for their Dell orders, but it looks like the company has removed to pay in BTC altogether. Earlier this year, various Reddit users had reported similar issues when paying in Bitcoin. As soon as major companies started accepting Bitcoin, the entire digital currency ecosystem received a tremendous boost. Community members were over the moon regarding the news of Dell accepting Bitcoin payments, even though....
Less than a month after it first began accepting bitcoin, Dell has received 85 BTC (over $50,000) for a PowerEdge server order. NewsBTC first reported the story after Dell CEO Michael Dell tweeted the following: Recieved PowerEdge server order @ http://dell.com for more than 85 #bitcoin (~$50K USD) http://dell.com/bitcoin #Dellbitcoin. - Michael Dell (@michaeldell) 10 Aug 2014. It's not known exactly who placed the order, but since Dell's off-the-shelf Poweredge servers range from $299 into the thousands, someone likely now has a whole farm acquired with bitcoin. One Twitter user pointed....