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Topic: Does anyone else think bitcoin is a stupid name? (Read 3217 times)

legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1105
November 23, 2013, 05:00:30 AM
#54
meh, its big now so people dont care bout the name
legendary
Activity: 924
Merit: 1129
I'm just gonna say nah.  I don't think that OP had any illusions about renaming it at this point. 
full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
Fourth richest fictional character
I like the sound of CryptoGenicBullion myself....
legendary
Activity: 4214
Merit: 4458
i think this thread is just for the OP to attempt to get 15 minutes of fame by trying to do something big like renaming bitcoin.

i personally do not see problems with the word bitcoin. but if i was to 'dig' deep enough into the words used within the community, it has been brought up many times the word 'mining' does not fit 'solving a cryptographic puzzle'

maybe the OP could have made a more convincing topic to discuss if he talked about the term mining. even though there are dozens of threads that brought up this subject before so again, a non starter of a topic

heres some examples:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/the-term-mining-has-got-to-go-5371
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/mining-bitcoins-should-be-renamed-to-burying-321764
legendary
Activity: 3164
Merit: 4345
diamond-handed zealot
Let's just call it Cash.

this...but bozotokens was pretty good
hero member
Activity: 910
Merit: 1000
first say "magic internet money" then say "bitcoin"...
newbie
Activity: 18
Merit: 0

Lol when I hear the word Twitter now I think of the movie where Vince Vaughn calls it "Twatter" (hearing him say it out loud is more funny than reading it).

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_a4ESySCKjgM/S_YXIgLof-I/AAAAAAAABrU/SM7LmN44cKo/s1600/couples-retreat-dvd-cover.jpg

All that matters is the name is here to stay.  Anyone who won't look into an alternative de-centralized crypto-currency because the name is funny - even after you gave hardcore facts - probably doesn't deserve it.  Maybe they'll at least have the sense to diversify their portfolio with precious metals.
legendary
Activity: 2506
Merit: 1030
Twitter @realmicroguy
I think the name is one of the reasons people don't take us seriously. When I tell them about it, they're like hmm "funny name"... Surely there must be better alternatives.

Yes!! According to my research people unfamiliar with cryptocurrencies prefer the name GoldCoin over the name Bitcoin 100% of the time.

http://coinmarketcap.com/
BCB
vip
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1002
BCJ
The only complaints I've had about the Bitcoin name is that it's fairly English-specific and awkward with metric prefixes. 

Saying "a millibitcoin" is much harder than saying "a millimeter."  same for micro, atto, kilo, etc. 

The English-specific I was talking about goes well beyond just using "coin" as a root.  What I mean is it doesn't work with the phonotactics of most languages that aren't English.   Most languages have four to seven vowels; English has eleven or twelve, including diphthongs like "oi"!

A lot of Asian languages don't allow consonant clusters.  If you're a (native) English speaker on the other hand you can pronounce words like "Twelfths" (yes, that ends in four entirely separate consonants with no vowels between them, and "th" is utterly outside the consonants most non-germanic languages allow)! Nobody else in the world, except maybe Germans, can pronounce "twelfths" correctly. 

Anyway, "Bitcoin" isn't nearly as bad as "Twelfths" but it sure as heck isn't going to work in, say, Japanese or Chinese; they'll have to insert a vowel between the T and the C in order to pronounce it at all, and because they don't use the "oi" vowel in their languages they're going to substitute something else for that.  It would have been nicer all around to name it something everybody can pronounce the same way.

One hundred and twenty two millibit

Where you been!!??
donator
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1079
Gerald Davis
The only complaints I've had about the Bitcoin name is that it's fairly English-specific and awkward with metric prefixes. 

Saying "a millibitcoin" is much harder than saying "a millimeter."  same for micro, atto, kilo, etc. 

The English-specific I was talking about goes well beyond just using "coin" as a root.  What I mean is it doesn't work with the phonotactics of most languages that aren't English.   Most languages have four to seven vowels; English has eleven or twelve, including diphthongs like "oi"!

A lot of Asian languages don't allow consonant clusters.  If you're a (native) English speaker on the other hand you can pronounce words like "Twelfths" (yes, that ends in four entirely separate consonants with no vowels between them, and "th" is utterly outside the consonants most non-germanic languages allow)! Nobody else in the world, except maybe Germans, can pronounce "twelfths" correctly. 

Anyway, "Bitcoin" isn't nearly as bad as "Twelfths" but it sure as heck isn't going to work in, say, Japanese or Chinese; they'll have to insert a vowel between the T and the C in order to pronounce it at all, and because they don't use the "oi" vowel in their languages they're going to substitute something else for that.  It would have been nicer all around to name it something everybody can pronounce the same way.

One hundred and twenty two millibit
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
Cuddling, censored, unicorn-shaped troll.
Most people think its a joke, those who have never heard of it fail to see it's a 800$ joke. Tongue
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
Most people think its a joke, those who have never heard of it. Tongue
legendary
Activity: 924
Merit: 1129
The only complaints I've had about the Bitcoin name is that it's fairly English-specific and awkward with metric prefixes. 

Saying "a millibitcoin" is much harder than saying "a millimeter."  same for micro, atto, kilo, etc. 

The English-specific I was talking about goes well beyond just using "coin" as a root.  What I mean is it doesn't work with the phonotactics of most languages that aren't English.   Most languages have four to seven vowels; English has eleven or twelve, including diphthongs like "oi"!

A lot of Asian languages don't allow consonant clusters.  If you're a (native) English speaker on the other hand you can pronounce words like "Twelfths" (yes, that ends in four entirely separate consonants with no vowels between them, and "th" is utterly outside the consonants most non-germanic languages allow)! Nobody else in the world, except maybe Germans, can pronounce "twelfths" correctly. 

Anyway, "Bitcoin" isn't nearly as bad as "Twelfths" but it sure as heck isn't going to work in, say, Japanese or Chinese; they'll have to insert a vowel between the T and the C in order to pronounce it at all, and because they don't use the "oi" vowel in their languages they're going to substitute something else for that.  It would have been nicer all around to name it something everybody can pronounce the same way.

full member
Activity: 173
Merit: 100
No, but I'll tell you what is:

millibitcoin
bitmills
millibit


If mB become the most commonly used denomination, and one of these terms is adopted, we're going to have a branding nightmare on our hands.  
BCB
vip
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1002
BCJ
I have always been reluctant to "bitcoin" too, but after it's been pronounced differently by different mouths during the last senate public hearing, I learnt to like it.

True.  The name is here to stay.  It just has its challenges.
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 250
Cuddling, censored, unicorn-shaped troll.
I have always been reluctant to "bitcoin" too, but after it's been pronounced differently by different mouths during the last senate public hearing, I learnt to like it.
full member
Activity: 164
Merit: 100
"digital cash" is probably more appropriate
Paypal could also called "digital cash"

but it is not a "coin"  which implies a physical thing.  That is the first hurdle you have to explain to the uninitiated.

What's about Bitcash? I think it doesn't sound worn out
BCB
vip
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1002
BCJ
but it is not a "coin"  which implies a physical thing.  That is the first hurdle you have to explain to the uninitiated.

What you control is a "password" or "key" or "private key"

which in turn controls "value"

hmmm "keyvalue"

"preceived" value

"preceivedkeyvalue"

or

"agreed upon" value

"agreekey"

"keyagree"
hero member
Activity: 931
Merit: 500
Since I first discovered Bitcoin, I think the name is straightforward, easy, funny, accurate and new. A powerful mix. I like it.
BCB
vip
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1002
BCJ
"digital cash" is probably more appropriate
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