PIVX- There are two ways to earn residual income by holding PIVX
1. MasterNode- Running a Masternode requires 10,000 PIVX.
2. Staking- Staking your PIVX, which has no required minimum, but requires you to keep your wallet active.
You can download the desktop wallet for staking your coins here https://pivx.org/get-pivx/wallet/
Running a Masternode will require more research on how to get started with that . You can do some research on that topic here https://pivxmasternode.org/
Potcoin- Staking your Potcoins in your desktop wallet will earn you a 5% annual interest paid daily.
Download the Potcoin desktop wallet here http://www.potcoin.com/wallets/
ReddCoin- You will earn 5% annual interest rate and also receive a bonus interest payment the longer you stake.
Download the ReddCoin wallet here https://www.reddcoin.com/#Wallets
Another way I earn daily interest payments is by using the Bitconnect Platform https://bitconnect.co/?ref=bobobjohn
I have been doing bitconnect for 1 month and I have been receiving my daily payments. You can reinvest your daily interest to compound it or trade if for BitConnect coins and hold them in the desktop wallet and stake those as well for more interest. You can also transfer your daily payments into Bitcoin and take them off the Bitconnect platform to cash out on an exchange Like coinbase.com
whats your thought on Potcoin looks silly?
Long term buy and hold on potcoin and stake it for the 5% annual interest rate
lol, I have been thinking about doing just that for the last couple of days. I don't have much to work with yet, though. Good luck!
What do you mean by active, "2. Staking- Staking your PIVX, which has no required minimum, but requires you to keep your wallet active."
You only need to decrypt your wallet and then staking ( if you want to staking you need to write staking=1 in the tools > open configuration wallet file" and save , see "PIVX FAQ" its really easy )
keep the wallet open on your desktop while it's staking for the network
I added the video in the post for PIVX staking
Sweet thanks! Friendly suggestion, might want to consider taking a look at NEO ;) (not NEOS...NEO...was ANS)
You were doing great until you started talking about bitconnect