Informative.
When I first posted in this thread, BTC were trading for less than a dollar. When you first posted, they were trading for about $3.50 each. Today they are trading for $18-$19 each.
I have to assume since you knew about Bitcoin then (and have a crystal ball), that you've profited wildly off of it. And because of your last post I have to assume you've exited the market, expecting a sell-off.
Perhaps you could look into your crystal ball for me and give me some more specific advice, such as how low it will go (so I can buy) and when (so I can have the funds ready).
No one knows, no one can know. But to really think it's going to keep up this pace is just unrealistic. That's ~400 - 500% growth in under a month, it's unsustainable. I think the explosion is because the adoption rate was more rapid than expected thanks to a relatively successful "viral" campaign and a fair bit of press in the right circles. Bitcoin was fairly quiet for a long time, slowly spreading by word of mouth and then in the last few weeks this thread was bumped and grew, the same happened on Overclock.net, and some news sites began covering it. Whether by intent, design, or pure luck the timing was good and the buzz began.
I'm not surprised it grew, I'm surprised it did grow so fast but I did miss the angle. It was marketed as a 'free currency' but you can't sell that because nobody gives a crap. Once it started getting press from people making money off of it, then people started to listen. And with something like this, more adopters leads to more adopters because the only reason anyone does it is because someone else is doing it. The problem here is going to be getting non-miners to adopt, it's common knowledge the % of computer users even with hardware to mine (discrete, modern GPUs) is quite small and qualifying that group further (inclination, knowledge, interest in mining) is even smaller. So the key here will be whether or not non-miners care about bitcoins enough to jump in, which would keep the ball rolling. I don't think they will, at least not many of them because they don't have the vested interest.
For the time being that's not a problem because the buzz is still hot and bitcoin's difficulty factor/halving intervals (and eventually static coin amount), intentionally or not, I think do an interesting job of artificially increasing demand, or maybe just amplifying increased demand. It's hard to say.
Regardless, the point is that it is a bubble. However asking someone to predict the breaking point is nigh impossible if for no reason other than because it's a bubble. There are no numbers to back this up, but I think the tone from the threads and the very limited places to use bitcoins anecdotally support the opinion that most people using bitcoins are buyers and sellers. Not consumers. Because there are so few consumers, the value of a bitcoin is not grounded by any significant tangible prices or applications. Because the bitcoin market is dominated by traders and it is so liquid, swings up will last longer and be amplified higher (which then re-create buzz, push it higher again, etc). It'll ride itself higher until it peters out and crashes, just like every other bubble. I'd say sooner rather than later given the current rate of growth. However the breaking is more a matter of what than when, as I think it's going to be a price point rather than a point in time.