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Topic: How do you define Bitcoin early/mid/late adopters? - page 2. (Read 1477 times)

full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 101
People tend to think they're not part of the early adopters just because they missed the time where a btc wasn't worth a dollar.
legendary
Activity: 2124
Merit: 1013
K-ing®

We are all early adopters, probably very early adopters.

Bitcoin is far from reaching mainstream and even if it reach mainstream in your country, it doesn't mean that it is accepted worldwide.



+1


when the london city boys and wall street boys came in it will be mid adopters fase.
newbie
Activity: 31
Merit: 0

We are all early adopters, probably very early adopters.

Bitcoin is far from reaching mainstream and even if it reach mainstream in your country, it doesn't mean that it is accepted worldwide.
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
Anybody who is currently involved in bitcoin is an early adopter. We have not yet reached the stage of mid-adopters.

I would generally agree with this. We haven't reached mainstream adoption yet - so it can hardly be thought that we are anything but early adopters in that sense. However, if you are taking this on a financial timescale we might already be at mid level adoption considering that we have reached heights far, far above what we started off with at least.

Additionally I'd differenciate between Bitcoin in general and Bitcoin mining. As far as mining goes looking at the investment needed to get started mining decently I'd say we are at least in the mid adopters stage, allthough looking at the number of bitcoin created and the max number creatable we are still early.
hero member
Activity: 742
Merit: 502
Circa 2010
Anybody who is currently involved in bitcoin is an early adopter. We have not yet reached the stage of mid-adopters.

I would generally agree with this. We haven't reached mainstream adoption yet - so it can hardly be thought that we are anything but early adopters in that sense. However, if you are taking this on a financial timescale we might already be at mid level adoption considering that we have reached heights far, far above what we started off with at least.
legendary
Activity: 3766
Merit: 1217
Check this graph:



The world population is 7 billion, and I'd assume that 2 billion might be the maximum possible Bitcoin adopters in the future. So we are all early innovators.
hero member
Activity: 868
Merit: 1001
https://keybase.io/masterp FREE Escrow Service
I'd consider anyone getting into BTC right now to be a possible early adopter. Right now early adopters are those who got in when the price was in the single and low double-digits. People getting in right now are late adopters. If we reach the point of mass adoption then these current late-comers could be classified as early adopters.
hero member
Activity: 798
Merit: 1000
Anybody who is currently involved in bitcoin is an early adopter. We have not yet reached the stage of mid-adopters

Agreed. Bitcoin is still in the early (possibly early-mid) stage, before mass adoption and all that.
Welcome the the bitcoin world.
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4801
Anybody who is currently involved in bitcoin is an early adopter. We have not yet reached the stage of mid-adopters.

How can we have mid-adopters when the bitcoin software is still in beta release, and is still considered experimental?
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
I think we can all agree that those who mined hundreds and thousands of bitcoins on their PCs way back in ~2010 would be considered early adopters today. They knew about Bitcoin before the rest of the world found out about the potential for cryptocurrencies. Back then, Satoshi was still posting in the forums and 20,000 BTC could buy you two pizzas. You couldn't really spend bitcoins on anything other than alpaca socks (or so I've heard).

So then who are the mid and late adopters?

For example, those who invested in Bitcoin from 2011 onwards when it first became known to the rest of the world and the mainstream media first took notice of it might be considered the mid adopters. This would have been around the time after Slashdot and then Forbes published articles about Bitcoin soon after it reached parity with the US dollar and during its first crash when prices fell from a high of $33 to about $3. The mid adopters would have bought their coins from Mt Gox and/or mined the coins with high-end GPUs.

Those who invested after the introduction of ASICs or the months preceding the November 2013 peak might be considered to be the late adopters. By then, governments had taken notice of Bitcoin and more and more startups were entering the field.
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