I just had a buy order fill for 16,820 Sats at a strike price of $113,420.69

Since I've adopted nostr:nprofile1qqs8cheyu8y47mclw424fx8sqxd7zfv6vhr446z3cg6l0v2un7ywpmsdavdjm I see things differently.

No more .00016820 btc.

I want my phone to play an animation of my buy order spilling Sats as though it were an old coin operated slot machine, everytime they execute, because buying Sats so cheap will one day be looked back upon as "getting lucky" and hitting the jackpot.

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Discussion

I was so confused by this term “Moscow time“ so did a bit of digging (forgive me I’m newb to #BTC): The term “Moscow Time” in Bitcoin slang originated from an incident involving Twitter billionaire Jack Dorsey during a 2021 congressional video call. Behind him was a Bitcoin “block clock” displaying the number of satoshis one could buy for $1 at that moment, which appeared as a number resembling a time — 1952 sats per dollar.

Some observers, including cybersecurity researcher Chris Vickery, misinterpreted the number as literal Moscow time being shown. This led to a humorous conspiracy theory that Dorsey was signaling Russian ties by having “Moscow Time” visible in his background.

Bitcoiners embraced this mix-up and started calling the sats-per-dollar rate “Moscow Time” as a meme. So now, “Moscow Time” means the number of satoshis you get for one US dollar, reflecting how much Bitcoin you can buy with a dollar at any moment. When Bitcoin’s price goes up, “Moscow Time” (sats per dollar) goes down, much like a clock counting backward.