Bitcoin as a Technological System
Hello everyone. 😊
Today, let’s explore Bitcoin — not as an investment, but as a technological system. Recently, Bitcoin (BTC) broke past $125,000, setting a new all-time high.
As the world’s largest cryptocurrency by market cap, Bitcoin is more than just a price chart. If we take a closer look at how its system is sustained, we might gain insight into where it’s heading next.
(For the record, I’ve never made a single cent trading crypto. 😅 So please read this purely as a technical observation, not financial advice!)
Bitcoin Is Not Solving Math Problems
Many people describe Bitcoin mining as “solving mathematical problems.” That’s not quite true.
In reality, Bitcoin mining isn’t about calculating a logical answer — it’s about randomly guessing the correct one.
Each guess produces a SHA-256 hash, and miners simply keep trying random numbers until one hash happens to satisfy the difficulty target.
In other words, Bitcoin mining is a lottery with far worse odds than winning Powerball. A successful block requires an astronomical number of random attempts.
(I’ll write another article soon explaining SHA-256 in more detail.)
A Miracle Every Ten Minutes
Mining success probability ≈ 1 in 83,000,000,000,000
≈ 1.2 × 10⁻¹⁴ (0.000000000000012%)
On average, a new block is mined every 10 minutes. That means someone manages to find the right hash every 10 minutes — even though the odds are nearly impossible.
How is that possible? Because millions of computers around the world are making billions or trillions of guesses per second.
And that scale of computation consumes enormous amounts of electricity.
Bitcoin Runs on Electricity
The Bitcoin network only functions because miners — computers performing proof-of-work — keep operating. If the cost of electricity becomes unbearable and miners shut down, the network would grind to a halt.
Simply put, Bitcoin lives on electricity. It must offer enough reward to offset the energy cost, or mining stops — and when mining stops, the system fails.
Why the Design Pushes the Price Up
Mining is a guessing game: more attempts mean higher difficulty. Bitcoin automatically adjusts this difficulty so a block is always found roughly every 10 minutes.
As more miners join, difficulty rises. Higher difficulty → more energy consumption → lower profitability. To restore profitability → Bitcoin’s price must rise.
That’s why Bitcoin’s economic design naturally creates upward price pressure.
Over time, as electricity prices climb, the breakeven price of Bitcoin must also rise — or mining would no longer make sense.
The Countdown to the Last Satoshi
Bitcoin’s total supply is capped at 21 million coins. Every four years, mining rewards are cut in half — the famous halving.
This process will continue until around the year 2140, when the final Bitcoin is mined.
After that, there will be no new Bitcoin block rewards. Miners will only earn transaction fees for confirming blocks.
Example: Block #917,892
3.125 BTC (base reward) + 0.00811197 BTC (fees) = 3.13311197 BTC total
In the far future, miners will receive only that tiny 0.00811197 BTC-equivalent fee per block.
For them to stay online, that fee must be worth enough to cover operating costs — meaning Bitcoin’s overall value must grow dramatically.
Only if the network’s total value expands will the ecosystem remain sustainable.
Technically Speaking — It’s Built to Rise
If two conditions hold true:
- People continue to care about Bitcoin
- Its security model remains trustworthy (no fatal hacks or design flaws)
Then, regardless of short-term volatility, Bitcoin’s structure points to a long-term upward trajectory.
A system that consumes increasing amounts of energy and computation per coin implies an intrinsic value that trends upward over time.
But There Are Wildcards
Of course, reality is never that simple. Several potential disruptions could alter the path entirely:
- A sudden collapse in public interest
- A catastrophic hack undermining trust
- Quantum computers breaking SHA-256
- A new technology enabling “mining without electricity”
Any one of these could destabilize Bitcoin’s delicate balance. That’s why rather than predicting price, we should continually study how the structure evolves.
Bitcoin as an Energy-Backed Digital Ecosystem
In the end, Bitcoin isn’t just a speculative asset. It’s an ecosystem sustained by probability, energy, and mathematics.
Its design seems to encourage each coin’s value to rise above a certain threshold — a system where value equals the sum of energy and time invested.
No one knows how high that value might go, but one thing is clear: Bitcoin’s worth lies not merely in price — but in the total energy, computation, and time it embodies.
Thank you for reading — and may your day be full of positive energy. 🌞
You can view the original blog post in Korean at the links below: