Yes of course one sat equals one sat.
I assume people who say this are inferring that the dollar price of 1 sat is irrelevant?
But how much can you buy with one sat? We price satoshi's in our preferred currencies so we can know how much they are worth in relation to things that we like to purchase.
One dollar equals one dollar, but does that tell me how much gas I can buy with it? No. The value of a dollar is always fluctuating.
So is there something that I'm missing when you say "1 sat = 1 sat"? Don't you need to know the equivalent in your preferred currency to know what you can get for it?
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241 sats \ 1 reply \ @Undisciplined 12 Nov
It's partially a push back on that sentiment. If we're going to get on a bitcoin standard, people need to get in the habit of using sats as their unit of account.
We don't for instance make constant references to how many pesos it takes to buy the dollars we have.
If you want to talk about how many sats it takes to buy your groceries, no one is going to respond with "1 sat = 1 sat".
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14 sats \ 0 replies \ @DJGuy OP 12 Nov
Thank you for this thoughtful response.
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166 sats \ 2 replies \ @fm 12 Nov
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446 sats \ 1 reply \ @DJGuy OP 12 Nov
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100 sats \ 0 replies \ @SimpleStacker 12 Nov
lol
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125 sats \ 0 replies \ @DarthCoin 12 Nov
Go back to economy class and learn about:
- differences between price and value
- differences between money and currency
- how a good or service is priced
- how we can determine the value of a good or service
Then you will understand how and why 1sat=1sat
https://bitcoinexactforecast.com/
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10 sats \ 0 replies \ @0xbitcoiner 12 Nov
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @Jon_Hodl 12 Nov
They're making a statement about the unit of account that you choose to use. I know some people who only price some things in sats because thats just what the price is for them. That's the unit of account that they use.
I think it is also often used to highlight bitcoin's absolute scarcity but I don't think it's an accurate comparison. I think a more precise and accurate expression would be
"1 bitcoin is 1/21,000,000 bitcoin" because "1 dollar is 1/βΎοΈ dollars"
Just my two sats
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @Bit_Alb 12 Nov
I think the idea is not to measure the value of sats in fiat currency. Sats have their own independent value. It's true that you cannot buy anything with 1 sat, but you can buy something with 1k, 2k or 10k sats.
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230 sats \ 3 replies \ @DarthCoin 12 Nov
Here is an economic class explained by the cavemen for cavemen.
Maybe this one will give an explanation.
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3 sats \ 2 replies \ @DJGuy OP 12 Nov
Did the cavemen double their stack by asking this question too?
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @Akg10s33 12 Nov
Very good answer π
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3 sats \ 0 replies \ @DJGuy OP 12 Nov
I've now more than 5x'd my stack by asking this question. Thank you.
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0 sats \ 4 replies \ @Roll 13 Nov
or think as :
a cat is a cat
a dog is a dog....
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0 sats \ 3 replies \ @DJGuy OP 13 Nov
Yeah but this tells me nothing of it's comparative value.
Obviously 1 BTC is 1 BTC. But using BTC vs. USD (1 BTC = $93,000) tells me what it's worth in goods and services.
It's not that hard to understand.
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0 sats \ 2 replies \ @Roll 13 Nov
it means, you can not compare one vs the other
a cat is a cat and not a dog
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @DJGuy OP 13 Nov
Obviously a Bitcoin is not a dollar, duh.
Without comparing it, how do you know what you can trade it for though?
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Roll 13 Nov
https://darthcoin.substack.com/p/living-with-bitcoin
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @anon 13 Nov
Understand it as buying power over time. 1sat today has the same purchasing power as 1sat tomorrow. In fiat terms you have to say $1 > $1 or $1 = $0.9 because the $ looses its buying power over time. And, yes this formula is mathematically wrong. Funny, eh?!
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @xz 12 Nov
A juicy red apple is nice but not every apple is red; yet 1 sat is equal to 1 sat.
β» Canon of Nakamoto thought. Verse one, line one (tentative translation)
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @j7hB75 12 Nov
This is the fundamental thing that I struggle to grasp. It is said that Bitcoin is a store of value which can preserve your buying power over time in relation to fiat currencies.
However, it seems to be frowned upon to consider the exchange rate of BTC and fiat currencies. How can this be until BTC is a unit of account where anything can be expressed and purchased in sats, wherein I can go to the grocery store and see a gallon of milk expressed in sats and not fiat?
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0 sats \ 2 replies \ @zapsammy 12 Nov
sats per dollar price is literally a disconnect from reality, because dollars are not real but an imaginary construct. it is a representation of a money god.
sats per [whatever real product] is a better representation of reality.
for example, a dozen eggs can cost 1000 sats. sats took real work to produce. eggs took real work to produce. the free market decided how the two real products trade with each other.
dollars took minimal work to produce. with the improved printing technology and now with electronic ledger technology the real value of a dollar is basically zero.
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13 sats \ 1 reply \ @DJGuy OP 12 Nov
Yes, but saying 1 sat=1 sat opposed to 1 sat = x dollars tells me nothing of it's value.
Does 1 sat today buy you the same amount of goods or services that it did 2 weeks ago?
Should grocery stores say that the price of a dozen eggs is one dozen eggs?
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @zapsammy 12 Nov
are you posting your music on wavlake yet?
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @denlillaapan 12 Nov
Yeah, it's ridiculous. They shouldn't say it -- EVER.
At best it's coping/trolling, at worst economic illiteracy.
HONEY BADGER SHOULD CARE: https://bitcoinmagazine.com/culture/bitcoin-price-action-does-matter
Also here: Nominal and Real in Bitcoinland (#737272)
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @7e6e393a56 12 Nov
A large monetary circulation (through government stimuli of direct transfer of money from governments to the population), creates the perfect storm for inflation.
Inflation is nothing more than the excess of currency in circulation, the increase in prices is its consequence. With more currency in circulation, given the main law of the economy (supply and demand), the currency ends up devaluing.
The great truth is that if it were possible for us to simply maintain our purchasing power, in the long term, we would be at a much higher level today.
The power of decentralization and the possibility of the owner of the cryptoactive having full control over their resources is something libertarian and protective, since the irresponsibility and excesses of centralizing governments would be insufficient to reach the purchasing power of someone exposed to Bitcoin.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @satgoob 12 Nov
This was (sort of) discussed on my item: #763982
It's in part a focus on bitcoin inherently having value and deemphasizing the conversion because a lot of content is just focused on dollar conversion and devolves into making a ton of money on bull runs. (i.e., if you go on the bitcoin subreddit, a bunch of people are in there asking how to get rich on BTC...)
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Akg10s33 12 Nov
I have already done the math in my head and if we say that currently 1 dollar is equivalent to approximately 1100 sats... then I can say that I need at least 50 sats or so to buy a candy π¬ and so on... Where I live the currency in circulation is the Nuevo sol...
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