BitShare Decimal / Divisibility vs Bitcoin
1 bitcoin is traditionally defined as 100,000,000 satoshi and as a result the community has
started to see things priced as 0.0001 BTC or less. As the value of a bitcoin grows, prices will
continue to have more and more leading 0’s. This makes it challenging for users to both
understand and compare prices and makes price tags on cheap items take a lot of numbers to
express. Furthermore, people are not as familiar with using milli, micro, or nano or other
fractional units as they are with using thousand, million, billion. These large units are easier to
‘round’, ‘talk about’, and ‘visually identify and compare’.
Throughout this paper we have referred to a BitShare as if it represented a similar percentage of
the share supply as 1 bitcoin to the bitcoin supply. The reality is that the initial mining reward will
be 5,000,000.000 BTS and 0.001 BTS is not any further divisible than a satoshi. Users will
initially price things in terms of millions of BitShares and over time prices will fall to thousands, or
even hundreds of BTS. By shifting the decimal point used in the BitShare network the effective
BitShare supply with be over 15,000,000,000,000 (15 Trillion) and could support an economy
with a $150 Trillion money supply with .001 BTS equal to $0.01. The US money supply (defined
by the M2 metric) is about $10 Trillion which means that BitShares could support an economy 15
times larger than the current world economy with the price of 1 BTS equal to $10.
这个 是你给我的最新版连接,我看了下 根本没有做修改啊,亲王翻译的 也没错啊。