Fun Bitcoin sizes.
0.01 = sats millionaire
0.002625 = "your" share(8B/21m)
0.1 = sats deca millionaire
1 = wholecoiner/21 million club
10 = sats billionaire
21 = "one in a million"
210 = "lakho mein ek"
21,000 = one in a thousand
210,000 = Saylor
1,000,000 = Satoshi
On TFTC #492 nostr:npub1az9xj85cmxv8e9j9y80lvqp97crsqdu2fpu3srwthd99qfu9qsgstam8y8 mention that he expects the (US) ETF's to acquire ~20% of all coins before things start breaking(due to liquidity issues). This is an insightful statement that explains a lot about our current financial system. Let's do some math to explain why.
20% of 21m is 4.2m coins. As of today, the US ETF's have ~800k coins in them. At the current ingest rate of 4kcoins/day it will take the ETF's 2+ years to get to 4.2m coins.
So in 2026-27 we will be looking at:
1. Bitcoin going exponential in terms of $ price OR
2. US executes a 6102 on ETF's to protect the $ OR
3. Both!
Of course, if Bitcoin price rises, the ETF ingest rate of 4k/day will slow down(assuming all other things stay the same, ). For eg: if the price doubles, the ingest rate goes down to 2k/day. So instead of 2 years, we are talking 4 years to get to 20%.
Therefore, this is what the math looks like:
$60k - 2 years(2026) to hyperbitcoinization.
$120k - 4 years(2028)
$240k - 8 years(2032)
$480k - 16 years(2040)
$960k - 32 years(2056)
It's counter intuitive, but THE HIGHER BITCOIN GOES, THE LONGER WE CAN DELAY HYPERBITCOINIZATION and keep the current financial system alive.
This is exactly why governments needs inflation in other assets as well(real estate, stocks etc).
TLDR: FIAT BASED FINANCIAL SYSTEMS NEED INFLATION TO SURVIVE.
Thanks for writing these guides! 🙏
How can I verify that the die rolls are being used to add entropy to the original entropy from the cold card?
hi there!
Bitcoin is censorship resistant, hard money.
If you don't need censorship resistance or inflation resistance, you don't need Bitcoin.
Happy $70k.
We are in for a long bull run. To stay efficient, I'll bucket my wishes into $10k increments. 🫡
anyone used current app?
they have lots of AI model in their app.
subscription is 3.99$ a month.
there should be lightning payment option to get the premium
nostr:npub1current7ntwqmh2twlrtl2llequeks0zfh36v69x4d3wmckg427safsh3w 
it's from the creators of cold card and accepts lightning payments
If it breaks $100,000 I will replace my 2012 MacBook Air with a 2020 model 🫡
My rule of thumb for valuing 1 btc is:
A meal
A flight ticket
A car <---- we are here --->
A house
A retirement
A legacy
"Science advances one funeral at a time" - Max Planck
"Bitcoin allocation advances, one funeral at a time" - Yours Truly
Thoughts on WoS pulling their app in the US:
1. Short-term : It will be a forcing function driving users towards non custodial lightning wallets, and therefore getting them used to (a)managing their own keys & (b)paying on-chain fees for channel creations/closes.
2. Medium/Long term: It will push devs to innovate on L1/L2 to lower the cost of on-chain channel management(channel factories, shared UTXO's, Fedimints et al)
TLDR:
This is good for Bitcoin! 🫡
Thoughts on WoS pulling their app in the US:
1. Short-term : It will be a forcing function driving users towards non custodial lightning wallets, and therefore getting them used to (a)managing their own keys & (b)paying on-chain fees for channel creations/closes.
2. Medium/Long term: It will push devs to innovate on L1/L2 to lower the cost of on-chain channel management(channel factories, shared UTXO's, Fedimints et al)
TLDR:
This is good for Bitcoin! 🫡
Satoshi = Ben Franklin?
As I read through Ben Franklin's biography, I'm pleasantly surprised by how common and pervasive pseudonymity was in pre-independence American colonies. Ben Franklin used a number of pseudonyms to publish articles in newspapers. Walter Issacson covers this on page 227 of his book:
"As has been frequently noted, Franklin often wrote anonymously or using a pseudonym. Sometimes, he was trying to to be truly anonymous; at other times, he was wearing only a thin mask. This practice was not unusual, indeed it was quite common, among writers of the eighteenth century, including such Franklin heroes as Addison, Steele, and Defoe. “Scarce one part in ten of the valuable books which are published are with the author’s name,” Addison once declared, with a bit of exaggeration. At the time, writing anonymously was considered cleverer, less vulgar, and less likely to lead to libel or sedition charges. Gentlemen sometimes thought it was beneath their stature to have their names on pamphlets and press pieces. The practice also assured that dissenting political and religious writings were rebutted on their merits rather than by personal attacks."
I think the Franklin was onto something with pseudonyms. One of Bitcoin's most important powerful aspects is Satoshi's pseudonymity.
"You can kill a man, but you can't kill an idea."
I was trying to be supportive of his frugal stretch.
Why are you so invested in Vic buying a TV somehow? Do you sell TV's? 🤔
My TV is 11 years old, has a permanent yellow line in one corner. Works fine otherwise.
Stay humble and stack sats 🫡
Mental note for Bitcoiners during the next bullrun.