Dogecoin keeps outpacing everyone’s expectations. Nothing would surprise me at this point. The momentum is so strong.
One thing people discount about crypto is the marketability of coins. Most try to market through a whitepaper and jargon. Dogecoin being a “joke” makes it friendly and approachable in a way just about every other crypto is not.
No, Dogecoin has a lot of people thinking one day it will be worth 50k like bitcoin and they're getting in "early". This is flawed thinking due to not understanding outstanding circulation, market cap, and daily new supply. I went to a conference with about 20 co-workers and I literally spent 30 mins breaking down these fundamentals to them. Lets just say they were all disappointed.
I really doubt anyone thinks dogecoin will ever be 50k though I’ve seen some wishful thinking that it will reach a few k. However, $1 is almost certain in the near future.
Exactly. Little do the late comers know that they are jumping at the tail-end of the train very late only because it is now easier to buy DOGE. All thanks to Robinhood listing it and Elon Musk hyping and pumping it on Twitter.
In one of the other posts, why are the very very early people now 'cashing out' their 11k+ DOGE. Perhaps they know that as soon as it reaches above $1 it won't reach those prices for years again, until the next run.
The fundamentals tell a different story against the current hype of DOGE. The pump is here and the dump will be catastrophic for the late comers.
> daily new supply
Yup, the DOGE printer keeps on printing new DOGE. They will be disappointed to know that they missed the pump and fell for the dump.
A tail emission is a healthy thing. It allows the network to remain secure in the absence of a backlog of high-fee paying transactions, which is what Bitcoin relies on for security once the block subsidy becomes insignificant.
The single reason why Dogecoin can't reach $50k is that it would imply a $6500 trillion marketcap.
Already at $7.7 it would reach a $1 trillion marketcap, so there's just not much room for price to grow.
I don’t think anyone thinks this. The discussion all seems to be around reaching $1 USD or now, $10 USD.
The latter would make it bigger than Bitcoin is now, but hey, who knows what will happen. It could go to $10 in a few years or 10 cents. I don’t think anyone can really say.
All I know is it is part of the zeitgeist now in a way only Bitcoin is currently. That is powerful.
When it comes to marketablity it can go over the top too. Safemoon for example seems to imply that it will go to the moon safely and to me it is a huge turn off. Another one was Cumrocket that is surprisingly not doing too badly but which I’d be super hesitant with for possibly soiling my portfolio
There was definitely a point where it was fun and accessible. I played with it a few years ago, back when you could mine with a single GTX 660 and earn a dollar or two worth of coins a day. Then someone made a scheme where you could buy Doge via Reddit PM, or give it as tips on posts. This is much less intimidating than the contemporary Bitcoin story of "the cost of admission is hundreds of dollars and you have to go find someone sketchy local or a weirdly explained ATM thing to get coins".
Yeah, there was some discussion of "when it gets to USD1", but it was mostly memes and "how do I get (favoured merchant) to take Doge?"
I recall there was a fair degree of talk that it was a good 'instructional' platform-- learn the tools and concepts of cryptocurrency, but you're playing with trivial amounts of money.
Bitcoiners see a less stuck-up version of bitcoin in doge and that scares them.
Without cashflow or consumable utility only memes designed to convince new buyers to buy from earlier buyers remain. Turns out many people prefer the doge meme to the bitcoin meme, and rather than network effects both only have linear popularity as speculative memecoins.
That’s an arbitrary, and pointless, distinction. 100,000,000 different people can own a single satoshi. What does it matter that each individual does not own the entire thing? The question is whether Bitcoin has enough supply, and there actually is no question because the supply is effectively infinite.
The scarcity argument is just factually wrong. Bitcoin is not scarce.
You are incorrect. The supply of bitcoin is limited. Whether you express that limited supply as units of bitcoin or units of satoshi does not change that the supply will never exceed that amount.
Doing a unit conversion doesn't change anything. The limited supply argument is not implying that you won't be able to own fractional bitcoins, it's arguing that the amount of bitcoin you do own with always be a fixed proportion of the total possible supply (in reality it's proportion will grow as people lose access to their keys) so it won't get devalued by the total possible supply increasing. Remember, value is relative to the supply. Looking at your bitcoin in terms of satoshis doesn't change it's value.
The supply of Bitcoin is 21 quadrillion satoshi. You are making an arbitrary distinction that an entire Bitcoin is some meaningful thing. I’m not doing a conversation. A Bitcoin is 100,000,000 satoshi. That is just a literal fact.
People want the supply of Bitcoin to be limited because their economic models depend on that false reality. If there is 21 quadrillion of something, it is not scarce. Wanting something to be scarce doesn’t make it scarce.
I don't care what unit you want to use. I place no special importance on a whole bitcoin vs a fraction of one. When people say bitcoin is scarce because there will only every be 21 million they are not saying that you can't subdivide them further, nor are they saying that only 21 million people can ever own bitcoin. They are expressing that it's supply has a fixed maximum. Do you disagree that the supply of bitcoin is fixed at a maximum of 21 million (or however many equivalent satoshi or any other unit)? This is what we are talking about.
As someone who was initially fairly positive on cryptocurrencies (2012ish), I have to say that I'm so, so disappointed how everything has turned out. Bitcoin wastes electricity. Everything else struggles to be popular enough to Really Matter (tm). And now on top of it this bizarre GoFundMe/Ponzi Scheme/Pump n Dump *thing* that has been happening lately has finally found a home in Dogecoin.
The way people gamble with GME, dogecoin, etc really disturbs me. I see people putting entire paychecks into <hype vehicle du jour> who really can't afford to do so. And the language I see around dogecoin atm really disgusts me. There was a reddit thread recently... this one:
I find it really appropriate that he's thanking everyone because in essence he's thanking all the people who funded his gofundme, just in a very roundabout way.
Furthermore, you have posts to the effect of "Please please don't sell at $1.00" that get super close to being self-aware. Some of these people know the only people who are buying doge are those who plan to sell it later, and the only people they will be able to sell to are people who then plan to sell it later too... and so on. It's a massive game of chicken.
I don't know. I consider myself to be somewhat financially literate and watching people throw away what little they have hurts to watch, since I've worked in equities long enough to see people lose more than they thought they could possibly lose.
when the whole inverse-volatility trade blew up and bankrupted several inverse-vol ETFs. Our trade floor was like death that morning as a large % of the people there had just lost huge chunks of their personal portfolios.
Maybe some people are buying responsibly small amounts of doge, as a joke. But I'm just really worried.
Reddit all started being shitty when it started being dominated by pump n dump schemes, the GME BS is still going on, now dogecoin, how can anyone with a brain believe dogecoin will go to $100. I swear i think about 80% of those posts where someone got rich are fake, there is a ton of astroturfing going on.
CEO literally said in their 10-K that if they're not at 90% capacity within 4 months, and borrow a lot of money. Then they can't maintain minimal liquidity requirements and must declare bankruptcy.
Isn't the source code for Dogecoin essentially abandoned for the last 2 years? I'm surprised a vulnerability hasn't come up like some mining denial of service etc.
It was abandoned for quite a while and as a result the code/network is in poor shape. But developer activity seems to have started picking up in the last few months.
In the same way how unprofitable startups are more attractive to investors because they are free of baggage of actually making money and have only future potential, so is doge better than bitcoin because it got rid of all the baggage of being a "currency of the future" or "digital gold" which might tie it to some real-world concepts. Bitcoin's best market cap is equal gold's or USD supply but doge's best market cap is unbounded. There are no anchors and only pure potential!
People are weird and unusual, consider how much people were rushing to get to California to find golden rocks. Money honestly makes no sense at all to me.
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[ 4.9 ms ] story [ 20.9 ms ] threadOne thing people discount about crypto is the marketability of coins. Most try to market through a whitepaper and jargon. Dogecoin being a “joke” makes it friendly and approachable in a way just about every other crypto is not.
In one of the other posts, why are the very very early people now 'cashing out' their 11k+ DOGE. Perhaps they know that as soon as it reaches above $1 it won't reach those prices for years again, until the next run.
The fundamentals tell a different story against the current hype of DOGE. The pump is here and the dump will be catastrophic for the late comers.
> daily new supply
Yup, the DOGE printer keeps on printing new DOGE. They will be disappointed to know that they missed the pump and fell for the dump.
The single reason why Dogecoin can't reach $50k is that it would imply a $6500 trillion marketcap.
Already at $7.7 it would reach a $1 trillion marketcap, so there's just not much room for price to grow.
The latter would make it bigger than Bitcoin is now, but hey, who knows what will happen. It could go to $10 in a few years or 10 cents. I don’t think anyone can really say.
All I know is it is part of the zeitgeist now in a way only Bitcoin is currently. That is powerful.
Yeah, there was some discussion of "when it gets to USD1", but it was mostly memes and "how do I get (favoured merchant) to take Doge?"
I recall there was a fair degree of talk that it was a good 'instructional' platform-- learn the tools and concepts of cryptocurrency, but you're playing with trivial amounts of money.
Without cashflow or consumable utility only memes designed to convince new buyers to buy from earlier buyers remain. Turns out many people prefer the doge meme to the bitcoin meme, and rather than network effects both only have linear popularity as speculative memecoins.
But hey, do what you want with your money I guess.
It’s effectively infinite supply.
The scarcity argument is just factually wrong. Bitcoin is not scarce.
Doing a unit conversion doesn't change anything. The limited supply argument is not implying that you won't be able to own fractional bitcoins, it's arguing that the amount of bitcoin you do own with always be a fixed proportion of the total possible supply (in reality it's proportion will grow as people lose access to their keys) so it won't get devalued by the total possible supply increasing. Remember, value is relative to the supply. Looking at your bitcoin in terms of satoshis doesn't change it's value.
No, I’m not.
The supply of Bitcoin is 21 quadrillion satoshi. You are making an arbitrary distinction that an entire Bitcoin is some meaningful thing. I’m not doing a conversation. A Bitcoin is 100,000,000 satoshi. That is just a literal fact.
People want the supply of Bitcoin to be limited because their economic models depend on that false reality. If there is 21 quadrillion of something, it is not scarce. Wanting something to be scarce doesn’t make it scarce.
https://john-tromp.medium.com/a-case-for-using-soft-total-su...
The way people gamble with GME, dogecoin, etc really disturbs me. I see people putting entire paychecks into <hype vehicle du jour> who really can't afford to do so. And the language I see around dogecoin atm really disgusts me. There was a reddit thread recently... this one:
https://www.reddit.com/r/dogecoin/comments/n2lp6w/im_crying_...
I find it really appropriate that he's thanking everyone because in essence he's thanking all the people who funded his gofundme, just in a very roundabout way.
Furthermore, you have posts to the effect of "Please please don't sell at $1.00" that get super close to being self-aware. Some of these people know the only people who are buying doge are those who plan to sell it later, and the only people they will be able to sell to are people who then plan to sell it later too... and so on. It's a massive game of chicken.
I don't know. I consider myself to be somewhat financially literate and watching people throw away what little they have hurts to watch, since I've worked in equities long enough to see people lose more than they thought they could possibly lose.
Like here: https://www.cnbc.com/2018/02/05/xiv-exchange-traded-security...
when the whole inverse-volatility trade blew up and bankrupted several inverse-vol ETFs. Our trade floor was like death that morning as a large % of the people there had just lost huge chunks of their personal portfolios.
Maybe some people are buying responsibly small amounts of doge, as a joke. But I'm just really worried.
CEO literally said in their 10-K that if they're not at 90% capacity within 4 months, and borrow a lot of money. Then they can't maintain minimal liquidity requirements and must declare bankruptcy.
Everyone will loose their money.
Yet FOMO!
https://github.com/dogecoin/dogecoin/pulse