I am by no means bearish and I know bitcoin will succeed, but if there's something people need to understand, it's that while price may be rising exponentially, exchange and merchant capacity will not, at least not initially.
There is "PEOPLE LAG." It takes weeks to hire and train competent staff. It takes time to install and configure new servers, upgrade hosting, change datacenter providers, get inventory, set up payment systems, deal with an exponentially increasing userbase. Meanwhile, the demand for these services are increasing at unprecedented levels, and users are demanding top-quality instant service (rightly so) which these merchants are simply unable to provide at the time.
There is also "magic number lag" in that the dev team is taking too long to remove the blocksize limit and fix the issue with tx fees (i.e. let them price themselves in rather than magic numbers.) But this is just another form of "PEOPLE LAG."
Things are going to be rough and jagged until the businesses involved with bitcoin understand they really need to ramp up their capacity in order to meet bitcoin demand - it's a gamble because who wants to invest in unprecedented amounts of infrastructure for a seemingly high-risk niche market? On the other hand, this very unwillingness to scale for an exponentially increasing level of demand is a main contributor to issues like the Gox lags that induce even more panic sells after an initial panic sell. A big holder can absolutely count on Gox lag making the panic sell they induce (by selling a large number of coins on Gox) even bigger and more profitable than they had hoped. And the other major exchanges experience regular downtime and lag as well.
Thanks for bringing these issues to our attention, they are what we need to think about rather than "LOL bubble, evil speculators, hoarders, spenders, single digits, bulls, bears" and associated memes and stereotypes.
Like I'm sayin'