$PI SCASH really resembles Bitcoin in 2009: a total supply of 21 million, mineable with just a CPU, and the code directly forked from Bitcoin Core 26.0, even preserving the romantic notion that "a home computer is a printing press." It's just that the geeks back then are now graying, still holding a few dust-covered BTC in their wallets; if they happen to open SCASH's block explorer on a late night and hear the fan whirring again, they might momentarily think time has reversed—realizing that that old laptop can still mine a 2026 night into a 2010 morning. Nostalgic people are not lacking, what they need is a gentle reminder: Satoshi's old times are being re-mined on another chain, so don't wait until it hits $1 to remember that Bitcoin back then didn't take a single cent.
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$PI SCASH really resembles Bitcoin in 2009: a total supply of 21 million, mineable with just a CPU, and the code directly forked from Bitcoin Core 26.0, even preserving the romantic notion that "a home computer is a printing press." It's just that the geeks back then are now graying, still holding a few dust-covered BTC in their wallets; if they happen to open SCASH's block explorer on a late night and hear the fan whirring again, they might momentarily think time has reversed—realizing that that old laptop can still mine a 2026 night into a 2010 morning. Nostalgic people are not lacking, what they need is a gentle reminder: Satoshi's old times are being re-mined on another chain, so don't wait until it hits $1 to remember that Bitcoin back then didn't take a single cent.