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1  Bitcoin / Wallet software / Re: [ANN] [ZIB] Zibcoin: Bitcoin for everyone. Start using zibcoins now! on: July 07, 2014, 03:32:58 AM
Is it dead by now?

Because Zib Is Bitcoin, it'll only die if Bitcoin dies!
2  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: zib / zibcoin / 'Ƶ' (Z-with-slash): friendlier terms for 'microbitcoin' (µBTC) on: May 08, 2014, 02:06:54 AM
the idea of Zib is dead

the zib fanboys have tried to say bit is not worthy due to confusion that bit is already used.. well zib is already used too.. and even stranger zib is already used for the exact same excuses that were used to object to bit.

The problem is that 'bit' as binary-digit is an extremely meaningful, essential concept in what makes Bitcoin work. So important, in fact, that Satoshi named Bitcoin after the binary digit!

And, those bits are very different from a divisible-into-100 quantity. Binary digits are indivisible and work in a base-2 system. So, there are two conflicting senses right next to each other.

Then, you have the sense where 'bit' means a tiny, usually nonspecific quantity. You usually wouldn't give a precise count of 'bits' in this sense, and you certainly wouldn't say something like "45.99 bits" – because a strong connotation of the word 'bits' is 'approximate'. But in monetary amounts, precision to fractions matters... so 'bits' as a currency-value has to fight that dominant sense.

Then, you have the fact Bitcoin early adopters are already using 'bit' in places as an abbreviation for 'bitcoin' (as in 'millibits' or 'ubits'), and potential 'b'-abbreviations for 'bit' also overlap with existing 'bitcoin' abbreviations. So 'bit' is highly confusable inside this domain.

That's what 'zib' solves.

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'Zib' and 'zebi' are not the same word, spelling, or sound. Also, zebibyte is a word outside of normal use, Bitcoin use, or normal scales. It's roughly equivalent to 'hextillion' (as compared to the far-more-common millions/billions/trillions).

The 'ZiB' abbreviation of zebibyte is similarly obscure/unused-in-practice, and the mixed-casing is important. If that's a problem for 'zib', then the problems for 'bit' are a hextillion times worse.

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as currency
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z_with_stroke#As_currency
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Ƶ was sometimes used instead of Z to represent the zaire, a former currency of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Ƶ is used as a currency symbol in the video game EVE Online to represent the in-game currency Interstellar Kredits (ISK).
Also, the popular British TV show Doctor Who uses ƶ as the symbol for the unit of money, Galactic Credits.[citation needed]

Right, these are the precedents for 'Ƶ' mentioned in the Zibcoin introductory essay and at "'zib': the friendlier name for µBTC" reference website.

They demonstrate people understand 'Ƶ' as a currency symbol, specifically a futuristic high-tech symbol, but that there are no conflicts with any real-world currency.

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That's a research institute for applied mathematics and computer science, not a bank. And it's named after computing pioneer Konrad Zuse, who created the first programmable computer.

A Z.I.B. research institute is not going to be confused for a 'zib' currency unit. But a 'bit' binary-digit central to Bitcoin could be confused with a 'bit' currency unit central to Bitcoin.

I appreciate you sharing your confusion, though, as it offers a chance to clarify how 'zib' is much more distinctive (and within currency, unique) compared to 'bit'.
3  Bitcoin / Wallet software / Re: [ANN] [ZIB] Zibcoin: Bitcoin for everyone. Start using zibcoins now! on: May 08, 2014, 01:43:55 AM
Help test zib-denominated tipping via ChangeTip at Reddit (or on Twitter with an @zibcoin mention):

http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/2502hc/who_wants_to_help_test_zib%C6%B6_tipping/
4  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: zib / zibcoin / 'Ƶ' (Z-with-slash): friendlier terms for 'microbitcoin' (µBTC) on: May 08, 2014, 12:58:51 AM
Help test zib-denominated tipping via ChangeTip at Reddit (or on Twitter with an @zibcoin mention):

http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/2502hc/who_wants_to_help_test_zib%C6%B6_tipping/

5  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: What should 100 satoshis be called? (make sure to vote for TWO choices) on: May 07, 2014, 07:12:57 AM

the pot calling the kettle black
zib is NOT unique. also Ƶ is ALREADY a currency both in the real world history.. and scifi-movie franchise. it is also used in games as game credits.


It's 'zib' the word (not the Ƶ/Z) that is a unique for a currency unit.

I've mentioned the other prior uses of 'Ƶ' (Z-with-stroke), so I'm not sure why you consider that some discovery.

'Ƶ' is used by no current real-world currency. That's already a clearer field than the '฿' (thai baht) symbol already popular for Bitcoin use. Still, that's not much of a problem; multiple currencies can use the same hinting-characters – many, many currencies use '$'.

What is a problem is relying on subtle B/b, ฿/ƀ distinctions to distinguish amounts – some languages don't even have the concept of upper/lowercase, and some people have already used lowercase 'b' as a Bitcoin-signifier (either alone or with the 'ⓑ' character).

Use in science-fiction for galactic currencies is a good sign. It proves people naturally understand 'Ƶ' as symbolizing a futuristic, high-tech currency.

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so please there are only you and maybe 3 people that are proper zib fanboys and you are all collectively trying to get your 'product' noticed. yes you have a website and you are trying to be the lead players in the copyright of zib... i know you see a future where you charge a licence for business or software engineer using your word..

'Zib' is a completely generic term for microbitcoin (100 satoshis) that I made up about 6 weeks ago, owned by no one, open to all. There are no copyrights/trademarks, existing or planned, to my knowledge. Like other spontaneously evolving words, 'zib' is in the pure public domain.

It's offered as a well-matched solution to a language/labeling problem, better in some important ways than the alternatives. That's all.

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with that said i do see your passion, but maybe you can put your personal greed and future plans aside and do something constructive that actually falls within the consensus of the community. rather then just you and your 3 friends little 'brand'

There are now 3 people promoting it? That's awesome, I started as just one. Trend looks good. ZIB to the moon, and into the dictionary!

I don't know any way I'd make money from 'zib' being widely used as the precise term for 100 satoshis. (You must be more clever at devious ways of making money than I am.)

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as for talking about 'bit' being confusing in regards to an 8th of a byte...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zebibyte
Zib is also a measure of binary!!!

Um, 'Zebi' is not the same word as 'zib'. That's also an obscure gigantic unit that, even under very optimistic projections, might never enter common use.

On the other hand, 'bit' as binary digit, a fundamental unit of information, is the central idea 20th-century/21st-century informational and computational science. Bitcoin only succeeds because of a series of breakthroughs in the science of bits, and the computers and networks that rely on them. To meet the future challenges, of scaling and security-against-centralization, even more innovation by people who deeply understand bits will be necessary.

The bit is so important, Satoshi Nakamoto named his brilliant invention after it. So you shouldn't erase or obscure that homage by retroactively redefining 'bit' to mean something else.
6  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: What should 100 satoshis be called? (make sure to vote for TWO choices) on: May 07, 2014, 03:49:06 AM
It seems "bits" is the clear favourite.  

Out of a small number of people, driven by campaigners to an out-of-the-way forum.

I'm sure the words 'bits' will see a lot of use. But it also has some major problems in:

• confusing people about the binary-digit bits that give Bitcoin its security – and in a cryptocurrency economy, more people than ever before will need some basic understanding of info-science

• making the core unit seem very imprecise and tiny: "bit-coin" reads as a value of "1/20th-of-a-cent-coin" (dust-like)

• creating confusion with words and 'b'-abbreviations already in use: multiple b-words, and making a B/b uppercase/lowercase distinction, is fragile in communications and commerce

So other words for 100-satoshis will circulate too, more precise and distinctive words, either because they fit into a logical system (like words based on the metric/SI 'micro'/mu/µ modifier), or because they've been chosen for uniqueness of sound and abbreviation (like 'zib'/Ƶ).  

And maybe the other words will prove more useful, to both experts and learners. The real test is usage, not armchair opinions expressed with a click.

7  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: What should 100 satoshis be called? (make sure to vote for TWO choices) on: May 05, 2014, 06:44:57 PM
and as for klabaki's trademark 'zib', a few have already worked out that its not so 'unrecognised' and 'unused' as he first thought

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As currency
Ƶ was sometimes used instead of Z to represent the zaire, a former currency of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Ƶ is used as a currency symbol in the video game EVE Online to represent the in-game currency Interstellar Kredits (ISK).
Also, the popular British TV show Doctor Who uses ƶ as the symbol for the unit of money, Galactic Credits

'Zib' is no-one's trademark: not registered, not common-law.

Its first use in this context was my proposal and creation of the https://zibcoin.org site. It's a generic newly-coined word for 'microbitcoin', equally open to all, and as the coiner of the term, I'd fight anyone's attempt to trademark it. The word 'zib' has not been used before for money.

'Zib' can't be easily confused with 'bitcoin' or 'digital bit', directly or as abbreviations ('millibit', 'microbit', 'b'). It will always mean just one amount, 100 satoshis.

If people want to use the words, 'zib' can be combined with the metric-multiplier prefixes - kilozib for 100,000 satoshis, megazib for 100,000,000 satoshis - avoiding the same confusion that would happen with 'kilobit' and 'megabit'.

The 'Ƶ' (Z-with-stroke) symbol has been used for real currencies in the past, or for fake currencies in science-fiction. But so has the '฿' (for thai baht) that's already used and useful for Bitcoin. So multiple past usages for 'Ƶ' (Z-with-stroke) just ensure that (a) it can't be monopolized; and (b) it's naturally understandable as meaning 'advanced future money'.

Sure, 'zib' is unfamiliar like any newly-coined word would be, and it's tempting to just pick something cute and familiar (like 'bit') even if risks long-term confusion. Newer words are hard at first, it's OK not to like it. But please be honest about it!
8  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: What should 100 satoshis be called? (make sure to vote for TWO choices) on: May 04, 2014, 06:27:04 AM
Most of these could be used at the same time: real currencies have multiple names, as do essential concepts. (The reference denomination of the world's first global digital decentralized currency certainly counts as something that could have multiple names, varying by community-of-interest, region, or language.)

Only the terms with 'bit' in them clash strongly with each other: because the 'u' in 'ubits' comes from µ/mu/micro/millionth, having both 'ubits' and 'bits' in common use presents a contradiction. (The 'bit' part means two different things, so the relationship "bit = ubit makes the 'u' a nonsense noop.)

So I'd suggest fans of 'uBits' remain open to the idea of 'ub', pronounced 'yubee' or 'yubees', instead. It's a variant that can coexist with other people using 'bit', offers a shorter abbreviation, and retains the implied derivation from µBTC.

That is, all of the following terms could circulate simultaneously as synonyms for 'microbitcoin' (which to be pedantic is also a 'hectosatoshi'), without logical contradiction:

  • zib
  • bit
  • ub
  • mic
  • centoshi

(The relationship "microbitcoin = zib = bit = ub = mic = centoshi" is plausibly logical.)

Different software, websites, and communities would tend towards different terms – we'd see from real-life usage which are most natural and 'sticky' – and they'd each just document, "all these words – zib, bit, ub, mic, centoshi – are synonyms for 'microbitcoin', 100 satoshi, 1 millionth of the classic 'bitcoin'".

For example, any of the following could be mutually-intelligible:

"Mr. K, your large frappucino will be...

   ...10,000 zib
   ...10,000 bits
   ...10,000 ub
   ...10,000 mics
   ...10,000 centoshi"

9  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: 1,000,000 bits = 1 bitcoin. Future-proofing Bitcoin for common usage? VOTE on: May 03, 2014, 09:22:56 PM
do we go with 1bit or give it another name.. i think 1zib is weird and wrong as it has no relevance and looks alien in regards to crypto.

'zib' seems a bit weird because it's new; any made-up word faces that at first.

But made-up words also come with no meaning-collisions – they can mean precisely what is chosen – and become familiar after a few exposures.

'bit' is always going to create comprehension/abbreviation/search problems, as people try to move between the different senses. (And since the bit-as-binary-digit is the core of the Bitcoin system – the binary math that gives the currency its scarcity and security – everyone who ever tries to become a Bitcoin expert will face these clashing terms.)
10  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: zib / zibcoin / 'Ƶ' (Z-with-slash): friendlier terms for 'microbitcoin' (µBTC) on: May 03, 2014, 08:52:30 AM
A highlight from the other Zibcoin thread:

I think we should elaborate a little bit more on the space dog theme:



Because, you know, dogs are quite popular these times. Cheesy

Any thoughts?
11  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: 1,000,000 bits = 1 bitcoin. Future-proofing Bitcoin for common usage? VOTE on: May 03, 2014, 08:47:34 AM
We are talking about future proofing so let's make 1 BTC = $100,000 for easy math.

Suppose Joe blow wants to order a $5 cheeseburger in BTC. Here's a few different scenarios:

A. "That'll be 0.00005 BTC please."
B. "That'll be 0.05 mBTC please."
C. "That'll be 50 uBTC please."
D. "That'll be 50 bits please."

A and B are eliminated right off the bat because nobody wants to recall how many zeroes they've put after the decimal.

This leaves us with reasonable C and D, but the word "bit" is far more marketable than "micro-BTC". Micro-BTC just doesn't roll off the tongue like bits does.

For those who say we have MicroBitcoin already, it's not about us... we get it, we're fine. We're already invested into BTC. Get over yourself. It's about widespread adoption transcending mathematical literacy, and "bit" is the ideal solution concerning avoiding decimals as well as ownership psychology.

I'd also eliminate C. There's no one way to say it – it could be "yu bee tee cee", "myu bee tee cee", "yu bits", "myu bits" – and all are multisyllable mouthfuls. (Another alternative not shown, "mics", can need clarification that it's said "mikes" to avoid it being said like "micks", which can be read as a slur term for Irish.)

But there should also be an E, for the made-up synonym for µBTC 'zib', leaving the two options:

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D. "That'll be 50 bits please."
E. "That'll be 50 zib please."

This is just as easy to say, has only one pronunciation, and avoids possible confusion from redefining 'bit'... which already has been used as an abbreviation for 'bitcoin', as in 'millibits', and has another important meaning as 'indivisible binary-digit' in the core crypto that generates/secures Bitcoin.

Zib also offers a better currency-character, 'Ƶ' (Z-with-stroke). Compare price labels:

ƀ50.00 (is that bitcoin or bits?)
Ƶ50.00

Small units (millionths) are a great idea. But the name doesn't have to be overloaded 'bits'.
12  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: What should 100 Satoshis be called? on: May 03, 2014, 02:35:31 AM
You're missing lots of options that have been proposed:

microbitcoin
microbits
micros
mics
µBTC
uBits
crobits
zib

It's not much use as a poll if you've already limited it to your two favorites, including one (renaming "bitcoin") that's nearly impossible to pull off without major confusion and risk of money-losing errors.

I did not pick my favorites.

Then why did you include your snowball's-chance-in-hell favorite choice, 'bitcoin redefined as 100 satoshi', but none of the others?
13  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: What should 100 Satoshis be called? on: May 03, 2014, 12:49:39 AM
You're missing lots of options that have been proposed:

microbitcoin
microbits
micros
mics
µBTC
uBits
crobits
zib

It's not much use as a poll if you've already limited it to your two favorites, including one (renaming "bitcoin") that's nearly impossible to pull off without major confusion and risk of money-losing errors.
14  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: 1,000,000 bits = 1 bitcoin. Future-proofing Bitcoin for common usage? VOTE on: May 03, 2014, 12:15:24 AM
My proposal is 'zib', chosen to be very similar to 'bit' – usable in all the same places – with even-better options for abbreviation and no meaning-collisions. More info is at:

http://zibcoin.org

...and discussion thread....

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=529301


Of all the many, many proposals (all of which seem to me to be solutions in search of a problem) "Zib" is the only one I've seen where there's been a real effort to provide the tools and information to make the change - most times the issue is presented as either "all we need to do is... [non trivial thing]" (social problem) or "all the developers need to do is... [non trivial thing]" (technical problem).

Thanks!

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Incidentally, the names you say are variants of "microbitcoin" - strictly they're variants of BTC itself, the same way gigabyte is a variant of byte, millilitre is of litre, microgram of gram, etc. Well, the familiar ones are - "crobits" and "eubits" are new to me, and I can't determine scale from the names (which, incidentally, is one thing I do dislike about "Zib" - it uses a new name to replace familiar names).

Sure, but they each derive from "bitcoin" through "microbitcoin"... and so while there's a logical path, they bring the issues with "micro" along with them. (Those issues being: that's a lesser-known, more-confusable SI prefix, because of the m/mu similarity, and implies something that's trifling/invisible.)

Ultimately if believing (like I do) that a handy new one-syllable 100-satoshi unit will help with broad adoptions, the choices are something that brings a lot of baggage through strong existing relationships (like 'microbit' or 'bit'), or a totally-contrived word (like 'zib') that can take on a new, precise meaning after overcoming the initial unfamiliarity.

'Zib' was the result of a search for a word that was as much like 'bit' (in size and sound) as possible... but unburdened with any prior English definition, and with distinctive abbreviation possibilities.
15  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: 1,000,000 bits = 1 bitcoin. Future-proofing Bitcoin for common usage? VOTE on: May 02, 2014, 09:22:36 PM
100 satoshis (no more than 2 digits after the decimal point) is the right unit size... but all variants of 'microbitcoin' are awkward names: "microbitcoin", "µBTC", "microbits", "crobits", "eubits", "mubits", "mics".

Unfortunately "bit" is also a problematic name. Some reasons are listed here:

http://zibcoin.org/faq#why-not-bits-to-mean-microbitcoins

The best bet would be to make-up another distinctive one-syllable word that doesn't have any conflicting meanings inside the Bitcoin system.

My proposal is 'zib', chosen to be very similar to 'bit' – usable in all the same places – with even-better options for abbreviation and no meaning-collisions. More info is at:

http://zibcoin.org

...and discussion thread....

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=529301
16  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / "Sumcoin" Re: Spin-offs: bootstrap altcoin w/ btc-blockchain-based initial dist on: April 12, 2014, 11:58:38 PM
I really like the idea of bootstrapping other experiments off the bitcoin endowments.

I'd first considered endowment reuse in the context of a crypto-catastrophe (restarting a new currency, using an old checkpoint of endowments) or coin-civil-war (irreconcilable differences which lead to two long-lived incompatible chains, descending from some common parent). But of course the technique doesn't need to be limited to such crises; it can help other experiments bootstrap with a broad audience of proven cryptocurrency adepts.

Obviously the idea is generalizable to making a distribution that's any scaling, truncation (in time or values), partial-randomization, or other function of Bitcoin endowments, as others have mentioned.

However, I think there's another supercharged variant that's possible, that I haven't seen mentioned yet. It'll seem wacky at first, but give it some thought... it may help cement the spincoin into a certain beneficial relationship with the 'seed coin' (usually Bitcoin).  

The variant:

Rather than picking a magic checkpoint, at which the spincoin distribution (for a single genesis moment) copies the parent seedcoin, issue the spincoin as a continuing, perpetual dividend from seedcoin holdings across all time, including the past, and the future (as it arrives).  

As an example, let's call our theoretical spincoin Sumcoin, and the seedcoin Bitcoin.

Imagine that for every block-tick you've held bitcoin-satoshis, you would be entitled to an equal number of base sumcoin-units. You'd redeem them with a specific claim(bitcoin-txo, start-block, end-block) action in the spincoin chain. Did your key(s) control a 10,000 satoshi output for exactly 200 blocks? Sign your spinclaim for that holding period, get 2,000,000 sumcoin-units. (Of course, that same range of holdings can only be spinclaimed once.)

That is, the Sumcoin endowments are the integral of the mother-Bitcoin holdings. If you held Bitcoin in the past but sold it all, you can still claim some Sumcoin (as long as you've retained your keys). That is, the incentivized audience for Sumcoin is everyone who's ever held Bitcoin. And, as long as you continue to hold Bitcoin, you get a stream of Sumcoin, claimable on demand.

Of course, there's far more Sumcoin numerically, and indeed its total issuance is growing by the size of the total Bitcoin endowment every block. But that's all just a giant factor larger than Bitcoin, and completely constant/predictable in both its magnitude and to which actors it accrues.

Once all Bitcoin is issued, Sumcoin's inflation is similar to Dogecoin, a small constant amount each period. That is, unlike inflating fiat monies, it doesn't use unpredictability, or closeness to the monetary-authority, to achieve surprise redistribution.

If there is a benefit to a permanently-but-predictably inflating currency, as many have conjectured, Sumcoin might best capture that benefit in a manner complementary to Bitcoin – because it's a linked funhouse-mirror-twin of Bitcoin. (That is, it might fill this niche better than coins with demurriage or other forms of permanent inflation, and other arbitrary initial distributions.)

In the large, the relationship could fortify Bitcoin's role as the permanent, undilutable equity shares of the cryptoeconomy, with frothy Sumcoin used for lower-value/higher-velocity consumptive transactions.
17  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: zib / zibcoin / 'Ƶ' (Z-with-slash): friendlier terms for 'microbitcoin' (µBTC) on: March 25, 2014, 09:45:18 PM
I love your retroactive origin myths, especially the Soviet space dog, and the Z symbol is cool.

Thanks! The space dog angle was pure luck, discovered after the first public posts. It kinda cries out for a "race to the moon" price graph, pitting ZIB vs a Shiba Inu, doesn't it?

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The name isn't naturally sticky, if for no other reason than it will have to be explained to anyone who hasn't heard it before (unlike the admittedly unwieldy micro & millibitcoins).
 

Right, there's an extra initial explanation, but then it may become much easier in use. Though, for people further from math/finance/engineering worlds, the "micro-"/"mu" prefix is already pretty obscure... and if ever prices are mostly quoted in zib-sized units, the intervening "micro" and "millis" explanations may be skipped entirely.
 
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I think it would need some kind of 'institutional' support to get the ball rolling, by which I just mean people in the community who can bring it attention.  I assume you've posted it to Reddit and reached out to the foundation/coindesk/let's talk bitcoin etc?

Reddit, yes, though it hasn't triggered as much discussion as previous "we need to go to millis/micros" threads.

Other outlets, not yet, but want to, to trigger stories and discussion. Can you help with the pitch/approach? (The first floating of the zib idea, via the Medium essay, to begin collecting reactions and questions, was exactly one week ago.)

I don't expect it to be a slam-dunk, or even grab most people on first hearing. I instead expect as time goes on, and each person faces the mBTC/µBTC awkwardness repeatedly, the benefit of a unique new short name will grow on them... and 'zib' will be an available, well-documented, and unambiguous option.
18  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: zib / zibcoin / 'Ƶ' (Z-with-slash): friendlier terms for 'microbitcoin' (µBTC) on: March 25, 2014, 06:38:26 PM
Just curious, where did the name "zibcoin" come from?

I did a search of letters/sounds that meshed well with "bitcoin" and "bit" – being vaguely evocative but still different enough to avoid confusion – and "zib", "zibcoin", and the 'Ƶ' (Z-with-slash) stuck out of the bunch.

The search started with "tibcoin" - "bitcoin but with a differently-jumbled base unit" - but the sound and abbreviation are a bit too close for clarity in speech and writing. Still, having the internal 'b' was helpfully suggestive. Then, cycled through the alphabet for other leading letters for a "_ib" sound, and 'Z' stuck out as having a minimum number of spelling/meaning/speaking collisions with other English words, being symbolically distinctive and memorable, and offering the available Z-with-slash currency-like unicode character. The com/org domains were also available, so the reasoned case for the terms and examples could be placed in the easiest possible place to find and return to, for boosters to collect symbols/graphics/calculations.

As it turns out, though, alternate derivations can be chosen retroactively. A recursive backronym is one possibility:

"ZIB = ZIB Is Bitcoin" - emphasizing it's just another convenience denomination

Also, ZIB was the name given to a stray dog drafted by the Soviet space program in 1951 for a suborbital test flight. (Apparently ZIB made it back successfully.) Since many cryptocoin enthusiasts like the idea of dog mascots going to the moon, why not honor a common mutt that's been closer to the moon than any purebred?

My fellow promoter of the 'zibcoin' term, klabaki, has also suggested:

Zibcoin is the short form of zipped microbitcoin, which is a technical term for "compressed microbitcoin", i.e. a shorter version of the word "microbitcoin".

They all work to help cement the term's meaning in different ways...
19  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: zib / zibcoin / 'Ƶ' (Z-with-slash): friendlier terms for 'microbitcoin' (µBTC) on: March 25, 2014, 02:08:49 AM
Lol.  Most parasitic altcoin ever!

Still, sounds like fun.  I might give it a go.

Thanks!  "Most parasitic altcoin ever" – might work as a slogan for us.

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I recall that at some point last year, I submitted the term "zub" for 100 satoshi.  This was based in looking for ISO currency codes for Bitcoin (XBT) and the problems some legacy financial software would have with more than 2 decimals.  With the established need for non-clashing currency codes for mBTC and uBTC, I suggested XMB and XUB, the latter naturally looking as though it ought to be pronounced "zub".

That's a nice sound, too! I hadn't seen your suggestion last year, but someone had mentioned 'zub' from the same XUB currency-code reasoning on one of the recent zibcoin reddit threads. (Was that you?)

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Overall, I'm pretty confident that I'll ultimately continue with "mills" and "mikes".

Sure, just give 'zib' a few fair trials to see if it resonates better than the "mikes"/"microbits"/"crobits"/"eubits"/etc... which of course all can be used interchangeably.
20  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / zib / zibcoin / 'Ƶ' (Z-with-slash): friendlier terms for 'microbitcoin' (µBTC) on: March 24, 2014, 09:39:00 PM
If you've spoken or written many fractional bitcoin values, you've noticed that all of the options – decimalized full bitcoin ("BTC0.0017"), millibitcoin ("1.7 mBTC"), and microbitcoin ("1,700 µBTC") – can be a little awkward.

They're logical, yes, but unlike how people usually think about money: as countable whole numbers, with a short fractional portion that's often so trifling is can be ignored.

We early adopters who have a natural enthusiasm and familiarity for math/finance details can manage with the scientific-measurement milli-/micro- units. But the next wave of potential Bitcoin users, who lean more on approximations and folk rules-of-thumb, will have more problems.

A focused solution could be to popularize a short and simple new term for the microbitcoin unit (100 satoshi), to allow everyday economic values to be expressed in whole numbers (or whole thousands), now and for the foreseeable future.

The term should be something that's easy to say and easy to abbreviate. Something that alludes to 'bitcoin' and 'bit' without overloading those terms. Something that's unambiguous-by-design, and resistant to likely causes of confusion from similarly spelled or said terms.

It should be something that can be incrementally adopted, as needed, alongside existing units - rather than requiring a big consensus or centralized decision, or a discontinuous definitional break with the past.

To meet those goals, last week I proposed a new unit name called a "zibcoin", or "zib", synonymous with microbitcoin/µBTC (100 satoshi).

In a nutshell, it gives:
  BTC1           = 1,000,000    zib = 100,000,000 satoshi
  BTC0.000001    =         1    zib =         100 satoshi          
  BTC0.00000001  =         0.01 zib =           1 satoshi
For reference at today's USD exchange rate ($575/BTC) and also adding dogecoin for comparison ($669/MegaDoge):
   $1 =   1,739.13 zib = BTC0.00173913 =   1,494.77 doge
  $10 =  17,391.30 zib = BTC0.0173913  =  14,947.68 doge
 $100 = 173,913.04 zib = BTC0.17391304 = 149,476.83 doge
Of course, given usual practices rounding monetary values, those zib values would more likely be said as "1700 zib", "17k zib", and "173k zib".

A longer case for the term is made at:

Medium: Ƶibcoin: Your New Favorite Altcoin

Other supporting materials and Q&A/news can be found at:

http://zibcoin.org
Twitter: @zibcoin

A forum thread promoting zibcoin in the mock style of an altcoin – "The world's first altcoin that's 100% binary-compatible with Bitcoin!" - is at:

[ANN] [ZBC] Zibcoin: Bitcoin for everyone. Redeem your zibcoins now!

To get started, just try using "zib" when quoting small bitcoin values.

These threads and the zibcoin.org website will make it easy for people seeing the term/abbreviation to figure out its meaning.

It will either seem natural and better than millibitcoin/microbitcoin after a few tries, or not. Software and services will follow what people adopt.

There's no need for big up-front consensus or 'official' decision... this is an anarchic distributed project, stuff happens & thrives or withers via the sum over time of many individual decisions, and through slow-moving shared language/culture.
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