1 - Bitcoin
0.1 - Bitcent = .99 - .999 are all Bitcents
0.01 - Bitcent
0.001 - Bitcent
0.0001 - Microbit = .00009 - .000099 are all Microbit
0.00001 - Microbit
0.000001 - Millibit =
0.0000001 - Satoshi
0.00000001 -Satoshi
I will need to sit down with paper and get it all perfect, but you should catch my drift. I think this should be a nice simple way to tell people amounts.
Are you trolling? Two definitions of "satoshi" and three definitions of "bitcent", and microbit being 1e-4 or 1e-5 instead of 1e-6 BTC, and millibit being what a microbit actually should be, and being even less than a microbit???
--> Almost none of these proposals makes any sense!
Just stick to standardized units "milli" = 1/1000, "micro" = 1/Million, and "cent" = 1/100, and that's all we need. This is what everyone knows and understands from today's everyday's life of the pre-bitcoin-era (like in mm, mg, ml, mbar units, or µm, µg, or "cent" (EUR/USD), or
centimeter).
Making it more complicated and inventing one name for each of the 8 digits after the comma will just cause confusion and will definitely not be adopted.
But actually I did not want to start a thread on naming conventions in general, I was just wondering about whether the particular term "millibitcent" has any reasonable justification, and as it seems, it turned out that it is a nonsense term without justification.
I don't care if someone says "millibit" or "millibitcoin" or "bitmill" or "mBTC" or "BTM", whether one says "microbit" or "microbitcoin" or "µBTC", or whether one says "bitcent" or "bitcoincent" or "centibit" or "cBTC", in all of these cases it is clear what is meant from use of the standardized units, so no need for any "standardization" - let the people decide what turns out to be the most frequent usage. ("Satoshi" is the only bitcoin-era-specific term that adds on top of this)
PS: On naming conventions, I just found this old thread:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/bitcent-3574(the term "millibitcent" is only shortly mentioned there in the last post of 25 June 2011, again as 0.1 mBTC instead of 0.01 mBTC)