In 1997 there was another digital cash application already; (Chaum's
DigiCash) it got so popular that some brick and mortar banks started accepting it! But unfortunately it died out almost as rapidly since it was closed source, patented, and the company went bankrupt. Unfortunately at that time people were much less willing to shop online, and there weren't many places to shop anyway. Had they done it even a couple of years later, or opened up the technology, it might have succeeded.
That said, there's much in DigiCash that is good (e.g. it's much better at offline transactions than BitCoin) and it really deserves a second look.
I had forgotten about them. I have looked into digital cash a number of times, and think the idea of digital bearer bonds has some real merrit. That said, well, real bearer bonds exist to close gaps in the cash system (traveler's checks, Gift cards), so I don't see any reason to be surprised that digital ones wouldn't be used to close gaps in digital systems.
I always liked the Digital cash protocol outlined in "Applied Cryptography" that allowed for a person to buy "money orders" that were not anonymous to buy, but utterly anonymous to actually use, unless the purchaser tried to double spend them.... in which case, the issuer could use the two spent orders to discover the identifying information of the cheat.
But..... getting back to history.... I think it shows that history does matter. Yes, technically speaking the main difference between bitcoin today, and what bitcoin would have been 10-15 years ago is the target hash would have to be much higher
Without having Satoshi here and "in character" (if the speculation is true) to say what the full motivations and inspirations were, its hard to say exactly what spawned it...however....
The time we are talking about was not just before EGold ran into problems, before DigiCash failed but also, before Napster was brought down. Before its direct descendants were slain. Each of these things can be seen as projecting requirements on any new system that doesn't want to repeat the mistakes of the past....
There is definite novelty in the way the peices are put together (if not the peices themselves) however, it is also the product of the problem that it was trying to solve, a problem that was posed by these failures. it is, their logical successor.