>Bitcoin (BTC), Millibitcoin (mBTC) and Microbitcoin (µBTC) is the >correct< approach. It's tidy, systematic and precise. The SI system is great, but it's nice if you pick a base unit that is easy for intuition to comprehend. It is a fact that I weigh approximately .000,000,000,000,000,000,000,014 Earth masses. If we arrived at rough consensus that this was a cumbersome way to express the mass of a human, we might then find a group of people making the superficially sensible proposal that we use SI prefixes and say I weigh 14 yoctoearths. This would be tidy, systematic and precise, but that might not be enough to make it the best option. It might be even better to choose a base unit that human intuition can make sense of, and THEN add prefixes as needed. I dislike the name "bits" but I think 100 satoshis does make a nice base unit. If we cannot crowdsource a more inspiring label we may be stuck with bits just due to linguistic network effects. -Ethan On Fri, Dec 15, 2017 at 1:27 AM, Marcel Jamin via bitcoin-dev < bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote: > I think one could make the argument that the only people who talk > about and understand 24 bit audio or 256 bit cryptography are the ones > who can tell the difference very easily. > > To me, your example seems to try hard to make the case for a problem > that won't exist in reality. > > Bitcoin (BTC), Millibitcoin (mBTC) and Microbitcoin (µBTC) is the > >correct< approach. It's tidy, systematic and precise. But that won't > stop people from using something that's easier to deal with as I just > had to google the µ character again. > > Let's also keep in mind that Coinbase has been using "bits" as the > default for over 2 years now: > https://blog.coinbase.com/bits-is-the-new-default-and- > all-new-users-get-100-bits-for-free-9165f757594b > > Just from a linguistic standpoint, chances are we'll end up with bits > anyway. Why fight it? We don't have a SI prefix educational mandate. > > Marcel > > On 14 December 2017 at 23:01, Natanael wrote: > > > > Reposting /u/BashCo's post on reddit here, for visibility: > > > > ---8<--------------------------------------------------------------- > > > >> Before anyone says 'bits' are too confusing because it's a computer > >> science term, here's a list of homonyms > >> [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_true_homonyms] that you use > every > >> day. Homonyms are fine because our brains are able to interpret language > >> based on context, so it's a non-argument. > > > > > > This ignores the fact that there exists multiple meanings of bits *within > > the same context*, and that beginners likely can't tell them apart. > > > > Feel free to try it yourself - talk about Bitcoin "bits" of a particular > > value with somebody who doesn't understand Bitcoin. Then explain that > the > > cryptography uses 256 bit keys. I would be surprised if you could find > > somebody who would not be confused by that. > > > > Let's say a website says a song is 24 bits. Was that 24 bit audio > resolution > > or 24 bit price? Somebody writes about 256 bit keys, are that their size > or > > value? > > > > You guys here can probably tell the difference. Can everybody...? Bits > will > > cause confusion, because plenty of people will not be able to tell these > > apart. They will not know WHEN to apply one definition or the other. > > > > https://www.reddit.com/r/bitcoin/comments/24m3nb/_/ch8gua7 > > > > > _______________________________________________ > bitcoin-dev mailing list > bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev >