

Loïc Morel
5.3K posts

@Loic_Pandul
J'écris des contenus pédagogiques sur Bitcoin. Auteur du Dictionnaire de Bitcoin, disponible sur Bitcoin Bazar et Amazon. #FreeSamourai



Mise à jour de Satoshi Index : - données actualisées jusqu'au T2 2026 - ajout des item or 🪙 / Big Mac 🍔 / Ethereum 💩 - affichage au choix en € ou $ - convertisseur entièrement revu pour passer instantanément entre sats/BTC/€/$ grandement inspiré par le projet SatConverter de @Loic_Pandul Dernière apk disponible directement sur le github ou encore la version web.




You do not need to run your Bitcoin node all the time. Just connect when needed and sync to the latest block height!








Bitcoin has two ways to program time into a spending condition. → The absolute timelock is a calendar: a fixed date, set in stone once and for all (nLockTime + CLTV). → The relative timelock is an hourglass: a delay counted from the coin's confirmation, reset every time the coin moves (nSequence + CSV). That reset property is exactly what you need to measure inactivity, and it's why Liana only uses relative timelocks for its recovery paths. New article by @Loic_Pandul: how nLockTime, nSequence, CLTV and CSV actually work, why a timelock on a transaction alone protects nothing, how Bitcoin measures time without trusting miners' clocks, and the failed Satoshi mechanism behind it all. Full article in the first reply 👇



Bitcoin gives you 2 ways to program time into your spending conditions, and a lot of people don't understand the difference between the two. One works like a calendar, the other like an hourglass. They look like they do the same job, but the logic underneath is the polar opposite. Here's the difference between relative and absolute timelocks, explained from scratch. 🧵👇 1/8

Bitcoin gives you 2 ways to program time into your spending conditions, and a lot of people don't understand the difference between the two. One works like a calendar, the other like an hourglass. They look like they do the same job, but the logic underneath is the polar opposite. Here's the difference between relative and absolute timelocks, explained from scratch. 🧵👇 1/8




