You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
RE: EOS Announcement - What Just Happened
Clarify me, if the companies planned to host their apps in EOS and plan to airdrop their tokens then what would be the point of having EOS tokens? to be only to identify the participants who can get the tokens airdropped? if apps don't need EOS tokens but they can create their own tokens out of thin air then isn't it creating more tokens than the originally planned 1 billion token by EOS? for eg if 5 apps create their own token then essentially its 5 billion tokens in different names equivalent to EOS. Am bit confused why would the parties to host their apps to have a new tokens rather getting EOS tokens?
all the tokens would have different purposes (use cases) and as such different prices. EOS is like Windows for the WEB and the other tokens will be like a Web application.
Saying there's no point in the eos token would be like saying there's no point in having windows because everyone could write their own operating system to run things on...
Hopefully that helps paint the picture