Peter R
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May 01, 2014, 12:13:25 AM |
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Exactly. People are used to doing it that way, and it fits in nicely with programs/systems designed to handle currency. I do not think you understand a thread How come it fits nicely with programs/systems designed to handle currency?? Because they are designed to handle decimal currencies (with 100 subunits). It would be stupid not to follow an already established way of doing things. For those who don't get the significance, this is important for legacy software which often has restricted input size. For example we use "bits" (uBTC) internally for financial accounting. All Bitcoin ledgers are in uBTC. Quickbooks (and lots of other software) assumes that exchange rates will fall into a specific range and thus only has so many significant digits). 1 uBTC = 0.00045 USD 1 USD = 2222.22 BTC Using satoshi wasn't (haven't rechecked lately) possible because the exchange rate fields didn't have sufficient digits 1 sat = 0.0000045 USD 1 USD = 222222.2222 This was even more of a problem previously when the exchange rate was lower. Even if sat:USD exchange rate fits currently in your accounting software be sure to check what a 75% (or 90%) exchange rate drop would do. It would be a nightmare to have an accounting system in place which simply fails if the exchange rate drops below $XXX USD per BTC. Perhaps we can use "satoshis" and quote prices (or do accounting) in "millions of satoshis" or "thousands of satoshis." We can use Msats or ksats for writing, but in spoken language people will say 2.5 million satoshis, or 35 thousand satoshis. They won't say "megasats" or "kilosats." For example, someone on CNBC would say "Bitcoin is currently trading at $4.51 per million satoshis." This has the added benefit of promoting public education about the resolution of our currency. I think the problem with the milli- and micro- prefixes are not the fact that they are SI prefixes, but the fact that division is harder than multiplication. If someone says 100 uBTC, I immediately say "hmm, there's 1,000,000 uBTC in a BTC and he wants 100 of those, so he wants 1 / 10,000 of a bitcoin" and my brain sort of hurts. But if someone says 2 million satoshis, then my brain doesn't seem to do any math. I just "get it." I think most peoples brains work like this (multiplication by powers of 10 is obvious but division requires thought). So again, I prefer bitcoins and satoshis.
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windpath
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May 01, 2014, 12:52:59 AM |
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My 0.02 bits (or 2 Satoshis) is that we go with Bits. It skips the pain of future transitions under the current protocol. By using Bits now there wont need to be another major transition until it becomes necessary to change the protocol and all related software. How much time this gives us is unknown, but I'd say at least a year
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hellscabane
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May 01, 2014, 03:32:00 AM |
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I tend to like the idea of going with "bits" the embedded two decimal points gives it ample amounts of familiarity and aligns it with a lot of accounting practices since most currencies are divisible to the hundredths place.
Although, satoshi just has that nice kind of ring to me.
[Stealing from a certain movie, "1 billion satoshi" sounds better than "1 billion bits," at least to me that is. Plus it's significantly easier to obtain the former rather than the later. Or maybe I'm just being silly. Hehe.]
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disclaimer201
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May 01, 2014, 07:45:42 AM |
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Satoshis are already established. Most altcoins are measured in thousands or tens of thousands of satoshis. The unit is useful up to anything in the hundreds of thousands of satoshis.
All you need is:
.00000001 BTC = 1 satoshi .0000001 BTC = 10 satoshis .000001 BTC = 100 satoshis .00001 BTC = 1000 satoshis .0001 BTC = 10000 satoshis .001 BTC = 100000 satoshis .01 BTC = 0.01 BTC .1 BTC = 0.1 BTC 1 BTC = 1 BTC
That makes 500.000 satoshis please. Thanks.
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Varicon
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May 01, 2014, 07:47:59 AM |
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I agree with satoshi as the defacto standard, but maybe under a different name? Would be better for more widespread adoption.
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Koko
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May 01, 2014, 09:42:02 AM |
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blatchcorn
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May 01, 2014, 11:16:35 AM |
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I agree with satoshi as the defacto standard, but maybe under a different name? Would be better for more widespread adoption.
What is wrong with Satoshi?
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Coinshot
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May 01, 2014, 11:42:57 AM |
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Satoshi will be ok when price increases a lot. Maybe $100,000.
mBTC is ok for now.
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Crossbow376
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May 01, 2014, 11:51:32 AM |
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We are already using different units like btc, mBTC, ubtc and satoshi. There is no need to have just one unit.
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leopard2
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May 01, 2014, 12:00:37 PM |
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jeez this doesn't solve the problem of dust transactions at all; and just how are you including transaction fees if you send 100 satoshis??!! NO Only way forward is to stick with the current divisibility (10^8 satoshis per bitcoin) but do a SPLIT via a fork 1:100 would be perfect. All the name change "solutions" are a joke.
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Truth is the new hatespeech.
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franky1
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May 01, 2014, 12:14:51 PM |
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when thinking of the usefulness of mBTC right now.. NO ONE can just transmit 0.01 mBTC due to the fee and satoshi dust limits. thus right now mBTC is still not ready to be used for anything meaningful, apart from looking like you have alot of coins/value
its much the same (well the polar opposite due to the inflation/deflation differences) as the dollar offering a $1000 bank note. although it looks like you have more value by holding one of these in your hand. you cant really use it to buy a pack of chewing gum at the local 7-11.
and as i said before, pricing everything in mBTC will make things like fee's look larger, cause things like change for 1c to become less helpful. so until the fee's which mining pools want to charge are atleast 2 decimals below mBTC. then mBTC is useless for actual use, and only useful for wealth display.
although i do think that spending years arguing about BTC versus mBTC is redundant as by the time people get use to mBTC, the value of it all will rise so high it will just spark another debate about changing from mBTC versus Sat's
one day in the future we will all be measuring in satoshi's much like the Zimbabwe dollar, so i find the mBTC arguments as futile for the reasons given above. same goes for uBTC.
as for anyone thinking that any change in measurement requires a blockchain fork.. you have it wrong. the blockchain protocol already measures in SATOSHI's... not bitcoin, not mBTC, not uBTC... but satoshi's... it is only the front end, web php code that converts it up. so its easy to move to other measurements without changing the protocol
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I DO NOT TRADE OR ACT AS ESCROW ON THIS FORUM EVER. Please do your own research & respect what is written here as both opinion & information gleaned from experience. many people replying with insults but no on-topic content substance, automatically are 'facepalmed' and yawned at
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DeboraMeeks
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May 01, 2014, 02:07:59 PM |
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jeez this doesn't solve the problem of dust transactions at all; and just how are you including transaction fees if you send 100 satoshis??!! NO Only way forward is to stick with the current divisibility (10^8 satoshis per bitcoin) but do a SPLIT via a fork 1:100 would be perfect. All the name change "solutions" are a joke. Mbtc is a viable plan, satoshis, now... NOPE
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ninjaboon
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May 01, 2014, 02:10:24 PM |
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Satoshis or Satoshis (0.00000001 XBT) sounds good to the people here but to the laymen on the street, they'll be scared stiff. I prefer to use the word "bits" too.
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ninjaboon
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May 01, 2014, 02:12:20 PM |
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My 0.02 bits (or 2 Satoshis) is that we go with Bits. It skips the pain of future transitions under the current protocol. By using Bits now there wont need to be another major transition until it becomes necessary to change the protocol and all related software. How much time this gives us is unknown, but I'd say at least a year yes, Bits sounds easier to explain to the normal laymen.
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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May 01, 2014, 03:48:29 PM |
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this doesn't solve the problem of dust transactions at all; and just how are you including transaction fees if you send 100 satoshis??!!
NO
Only way forward is to stick with the current divisibility (10^8 satoshis per bitcoin) but do a SPLIT via a fork
1:100 would be perfect.
Then the dust threshold and anti DOS fees would be raised 100x. They aren't arbitrary. They serve a purpose and if you redenominated then the min fee to relay and the dust threshold (which is ~56% of min fee to relay) would rise correspondingly. Still the dust threshold is now (v0.9) 560 satoshis which is worth 1/4 of a US cent. There is no reason for the dust threshold to be lower (unless the value goes much higher at which point the it will be lowered again).
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MegaHustlr
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May 01, 2014, 03:59:24 PM |
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I dont think we are ready for such big numbers. Imagine sending 20000000000 satoshis
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dreamspark
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May 01, 2014, 04:06:07 PM |
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Satoshis are too small to be used in everyday currently but in the future hopefully never really linked mBTC bits is more intersting and more natural.
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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May 01, 2014, 05:39:05 PM |
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I dont think we are ready for such big numbers. Imagine sending 20000000000 satoshis Exactly. An "excessive" number of zeros on the right is just as easy to make mistakes as an excessive number of zeros on the left. Quick (without tediously counting zeros) was that 200000000000 sats, 2000000000 sats, or 20000000000 sats?
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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May 01, 2014, 05:44:25 PM |
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Satoshis or Satoshis (0.00000001 XBT) sounds good to the people here but to the laymen on the street, they'll be scared stiff. I prefer to use the word "bits" too.
I was in favor of mBTC (or em bits) for a long time but "bits" as a colloquial for micro bitcoins could be useful. Being 100 satoshis it reduces (somewhat) the excessive number of zeroes, provides two decimal places (useful for legacy financial applications) and shouldn't need to be changed outside of the most optimistic (and unrealistic) scenarios. For example: The dust limit is currently 5.6 bits. The min fee to relay is being reduced from 100 bits to 10 bits. You can currently get more than 2,200 bits to the dollar. There are one million bits in a bitcoin. I am selling this used GPU for 840,000 bits.
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