what are you afraid of, your precious bit losing ground after being viral for 2 weeks because some better name will replace it before a lot of newcomers storm to the forums after next bull run?
Are you afraid people won't be confused by bit because i have prevented that disaster to come because i have already thought ahead unlike most others?
As you can see below, mills are not unpopular at all, and pre-date bits by 2 years, if mills and cents are used, mikes can also be used.
on a topic on what to call 1/1000th bitcoin:
singular - milli
plural - millies
1milli
10 millies
Millies, as a friendly form of millibitcoins.
I like it because it goes with Mikes, a friendly form of microbitcoins, and someone is sure to do a nice logo of Millie and Mike.
Millies, as a friendly form of millibitcoins.
I like it because it goes with Mikes, a friendly form of microbitcoins, and someone is sure to do a nice logo of Millie and Mike.
Millie and Mike could even be friends with Bob and Alice
I think creating names for 0.001, 0.00001, etc. is silly.
Just use two different units BTC and something like satoshi/bitcoinunits/bitcreds/credits representing 0.00000001 BTC.
The problem with milli/micro/nano is that when you get a bitcoin amount like 0.00245678, what random btc name do you use..?
Also it's a LOT easier to tell the size of something when it's larger because of commas and no leading zeros:
eg 34,400 BCU vs 0.00034400 BTC
That would be 2 millies, 456 mikes and 78 satoshis
or
245678 satoshis
Millie for .001 is the winner, imo.
May I propose 'milray' for .0001?
Mark Twain introduced a fictional elaboration of the mill in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. When Hank Morgan, the American time traveler, introduces decimal currency to Arthurian Britain, he has it denominated in cents, mills, and "milrays", or tenths of a mill (the name perhaps suggested by "myriad", meaning ten thousand or by the Portuguese and Brazilian milreis).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mill_%28currency%29#Fiction12GHuMPPZDxDqtZZS6wP2FTv2c4V4KPohW
I like "mills" or "millies".
The new default transaction fee is 5 mills per kilobyte, by the way.
1 satoshi = 1e-9 BTC (since it/he doesn't really exist)
0.001 BTC = 1e-3 BTC = = 1 millibitcoin = 1 million satoshi = 1 mill
I propose "1 mill"
we can have two camps one going to the left of the decimal, the other to the right and things can be thoroughly confused (and conflict with abbreviated millilitres and milligrams) but they will both agree on the mill.
mBTC - mills ftw! A single syllable and easy to understand.
I like using the slang of "millies" and "mikes" for the more formal "millibits" and "microbits", respectively.
These names are very easy to remember, for those of us that understand that 1 milli = 1e-3 and 1 micro = 1e-6. Certainly almost everyone on this forum is going to intuitively grok that nomenclature. It also gives me the mental picture of a bill with a face printed on it, in the same way that the term "Benjamin" refers to a $100 bill.
[Edited]Also, it appears that we already have general consensus that 0.00000001 BTC = 1 satoshi.
I agree with the abbreviation mbtc, the formal conventional form, millibits, in formal long form, millibitcoins, and in slang, mills or millis,
Not sure if this has been mentioned, but a millcoin makes the most sense to me. 1 mill = 1/10th of a cent.
mBitcoin is also another good one.
How about:
1 = bit
0.01 = 10^-2 = nit
10^-4 = mit
10^-6 = dit
10^-8 = pit
or substitute for your favorite 1st letters.
Actually, maybe nit and mit might sound too similar, e.g. over the phone, "WHAT, you're selling your car for 99 nits?
That's a hundred times more than I expected,... ahh, mits, mits, now I understand. Haha, I thought you said nits, haha."
A car for 99 mits... hmm, that'd be about $200,000 per bit, depending on your definition of car. Guess it'll take a while to get that high, though if it went up a factor of 10 every month, like last month, then we've only to wait until 2012 at the latest.
millibit
millicoin
Here are submissions so far, in roughly reverse alphabetical order:
zibit
ubitcoin
TriBit (2)
Tiny-Bit
tidbit
tBit - pronounced tee-Bit; t as in one thousandth of a BitCoin
nibit
Nibble
nanocoin
Milth
millie(s)
millicoin,milicoin (9)
millicent
milliBitty
Millibitcoin
millibit,milibit (15)
Millebit
millcoin
MillBit
MiliBit
miliBC
milbtc
MilBits
mil
Microcoin
mic
mBTC og 1000-parts
mBitcoin
m1, 2m etc.
Little Penny Bitcoin
Litbit
LilBit (2)
Kris
groat
farthing
do bit - at this small size it's no longer a question of value but principles - what will you do in the world with a tiny little influence?
credit
Bity
BittyCoin
BittyCent
bitty bitlet (then 0.01 is a bitlet, then 0.01 is a bit, then 1.0 is a bitcoin)
Bitty (plural form: Bitties)
bitty
Bitping
bitney
bitmillit
BitMillen
10 satoshi's
BitMill, Bitmil - (10)
Bitmi
bitly
Bitlet, bitlit (4)
bithun
Bithou
BitDots
Bitcoin atom
Bitchit
bitcent (2)
BitByte (2)
bitbit (3)
Bitbat
Bit-Tot
Bit-Mini
bit-hundredth
bit
BB
bantam bit
BajtCent
Amir
bitpence
bitk, pronounced bit-kay. Simple, short, and 1000 bitk would be one bitcoin.
bitillion
I'd encourage people to look over all of these and continue the discussion about what is the most useful name. Spelling isn't so relevant for now, its the phonetic sound I'm curious about, I've doubled up those suggestions that have the same sound.
I vote for "mil".
It's short and sweet. It's technically correct. It's ambiguous enough that Americans won't immediately think of it as having very little value.
I'm still advocating for bitmill for several reasons.
1. People can easily attribute BITmill to the bitcoin service.
2. It follows the pattern of BITcoins BITcent, blah blah blah.
3. A mill is a legit piece of currency within the Unites States. Gas prices have a mill price at the end of the price.
4. It flows together in a phonic manner.
I like millibit myself.
As said before it lends itself to be used a millie, and could end up being a common transaction amount.
1 Bitcoin
.01 Bitcent
.001 Millibit
and so forth.
Skysurfer808
millibit
FPGA hashers are 'bit mills'. Cut the 'bit', just leave 'mils'.
Millbit? I think that's the most realistic
millibit.
Accurate, easy, and short.
Also the nice thing is that since bit (general nonbitcoin word) is a discrete unit there is no such concept of sub bit. Therefore without spelling out "coin" it becomes disambiguous that the speaker is talking about only bitcoin.
Recently I had a falling price auction where the price of a new BFL Single fell by 2 millibits per minute.
I guess I thought people were already referring to them as millibits.
0.001 BTC = "one milliBTC" or one Millie
0.000001 BTC = "one microBTC" or one Mike
0.001 = milibit = "milies" (pronounced mil-E-zzz) IMO