Smith1776 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 01, 2025 4:46 pm
Also, when it comes to the topic of something coming along and replacing Bitcoin, the proposition seems unlikely. You can see the beginning's of Bitcoin's position being set in stone already.
This is the more important and broader thing to reply to.
I personally can envision Bitcoin losing #1 status. I think that is a likely scenario, in fact.
I do not think that Bitcoin going away entirely is nearly so likely a scenario.
I put the above as mere bald statements so you can see them very clearly for what they are: bald statements. Just one guy speculating. Like all speculations: likely to be wrong. But now I will explain my reasoning.
Bitcoin actually has major technical problems. Mistakes. As time has gone by, it has become less and less possible that these problems can ever be fixed. Just to pick one that is easy to explain: it is not a very good currency. The current average fee to make a spend on the Bitcoin network is $1.44 (
https://ycharts.com/indicators/bitcoin_ ... action_fee ). But the fee varies wildly depending on if you're trying to transact during a busy time (peak hours) or not. Typical wait rule-of-thumb is always given as about 10 minutes. This isn't a realistic clearing time for normal retail transactions. It would need to be 100 times faster, and it can't be.
It is realized even by hard-core Bitcoin maxis that it is not a very good currency (medium of exchange) and that is why the Lightning Network was built as a layer atop Bitcoin, to address this problem.
In addition to the problem side of things, which is negative, let's look at the positive: there are also potential new technologies and innovations that could really help a blockchain to be useful and better. Both innovations to make improvements to what Bitcoin does currently, and innovations making it possible to do entirely new things that Bitcoin cannot do at all. Understand: most such new technologies are very unlikely to be incorporated into Bitcoin. The dynamics and realities mean it's simply not possible.
So, given that A) it has problems which can't (or, to be precise, won't) be solved, and B) it will not be able to incorporate new innovations and improvements, the stage is set for Bitcoin to be out-competed at some time in the future.
All these blockchain things (well, almost all) are entirely digital abstractions, making them totally and trivially-easily exchangeable for each other (so long as you can find a buyer/seller).
And so in a way, you could think of them as all different flavors of the same thing, couldn't you? Yes you could.
With more and better crypto exchanges, the situation more and more will resemble that of a stock market with each cryptocurrency being an individual stock on that market, easily and instantly swappable for any other stock.
There are certain advantages that Bitcoin will continue to have causing people to hodl it, to want it, and to value it.
However, that does not mean that others will not likewise have certain advantages of their own. Bitcoin maximalists like to state that it is inevitable for all other coins to go to zero and for only Bitcoin to be left standing. Since other coins have actual utility, through technical features and superiority which they have and Bitcoin does not, this statement seems to be rather baseless, at least applied to these "utility coins" (such as Monero).
One major and civilizationally-important technology coming available is zero-knowledge proofs. This will make trust-less, verifiable computation-at-a-distance possible. Bitcoin will not be able to be upgraded to be a ZK-centric chain. This is, right now, the most important innovation I see coming that will be instantiated (brought to life) by some other project -- *not* Bitcoin.
Personally I think Nockchain has some good ideas for how to bring ZK technology to life, and so I would like to see it succeed at doing so.