The only obstacle, as I perceive it, is the limited number of merchants accepting them.
I don't think not moving to other coins/blockchains has anything to do with the number of merchants accepting them, I hardly believe that there are enough people who use
BTC for any sort of merchant payments, it just doesn't make sense to me, the way I see it is that almost nobody uses
BTC for "merchants payment" if we talking merchants, how many accept bitcoin? 15,000? 30,000? against 350M + who accepts credit cards? what does that give you? 0.00x % ? you round it to the nearest whole number and you get exactly 0%.
I do however agree with the first part of your post, leaving
BTC isn't as easy as leaving your country, and the main reason why people are not leaving BTC is that they treat it as a store of value, and they think it has the best and most guaranteed chances of growth compared to any other coin. if it was not for the "store of value" concept, why would anybody buy
BTC today? it's the most expensive coin to spend and the slowest to move, which proves the above point, in the grand scheme of things -- nobody uses
BTC to "transact".
And yes, someone will quote the white paper "P2P electronic cash system .................", spare yourself the efforts, nobody cares.
So now begs the question, is
BTC on-chain even feasible to use for daily payment? will it ever be? The answer is simply put - NO!.
It's now Ordinals to blame, fine, let's ban them, will that solve the problem forever? will there be enough room for 5% of the world population to transact on Bitcoin's main blockchain for cheap? NO!
is there any technical solution that we may implement in the future that would keep
BTC as secure as today and process millions of transactions per second without breaking something? NO!
So what should we expect? what are we waiting for? it seems like our only hope is that the "others" would stop using it so that "we can", those "others" will differ from time to time, it could be BRC-20 junk shit, it could be banks settling their payments, pools spamming the blockchain to keep fees high, rich people paying for coffee using bitcoin, we don't know-- but there will always be "others" to fight.
What is the right thing to do?
sheeple acceptance
We need to accept that we can't expect
BTC to
1- Make us ultra-rich, allow us to transact for dirt-cheap, stay as secure, not to be regulated, and cure cancer. That's just too much to ask and seems like we want everything!
Transacting for cheap on the blockchain will not be a thing in the future, I can't stress this enough, without other layers/sidechains that actually work we need to start to treat
BTC for what it is treated by the majority of people who don't seem to be complaining about fees because they hardly spend any of their
BTC anyways.
Really?
151.02 EH/s currently
What does currently mean for the website you posted? you can only know the pool's real hashrate if they report it publically, other than that it's just guesswork, I opened the link right after you posted your post and it's now showing 152.34 EH/s, there is no way the added 1.3EH in 10 seconds, what you see here is estimated hashrate based on how many blocks they found during x period of time (seems like last 100 blocks for the website you posted), those figures are highly affected by pool's luck, i.e, it's possible for a pool with 10EH to show as 20EH if they had 50% luck for whatever x period the website uses.
With that said, I believe currently through their API (assuming it's correct), foundry reports 155EH.