Title: What is the power consumption of proof-of algorithms? Post by: rytyr on February 17, 2017, 06:07:44 PM How much less is the power consumption of PoS (let' say Nxt, but could any other PoS coin) compared to PoW algorithms (e.g. Bitcoin)? And how advantageous is the PoI (NEM) algorithm to PoS? I tried to find information on the Internet, but I could not find a reliable source.
edit: exchanged PoW with PoS to make the question meaningful :) Title: Re: What is the power consumption of proof-of algorithms? Post by: Febo on February 17, 2017, 09:53:48 PM How much less is the power consumption of PoW algorithms (e.g. Bitcoin) compared to PoS (let' say Nxt, but could any other PoS coin)? And how advantageous is the PoI (NEM) algorithm to PoS? I tried to find information on the Internet, but I could not find a reliable source. Power consumption difference is huge and incomparable. I dont know much of PoI, but if it would be so good i bet there would be 100+ coins using it. In general many think PoS is flawed. Biggest difference is that you need to attack network only once and is dead, while in PoW you need to keep attacking it for a kill. Title: Re: What is the power consumption of proof-of algorithms? Post by: kiklo on February 18, 2017, 06:48:02 AM Bitcoin : Energy Wasteful 343 megawatts would be enough to power 285,833 US homes per second
Which becomes: 20,580 Megawatts per minute 1,234.800 Gigawatts per hour 29,635.200 Gigawatts per Day 10,816.848000 Terawatts per Year https://www.thebalance.com/how-much-power-does-the-bitcoin-network-use-391280 Quote At the time of writing, the computers on the bitcoin network were doing 342,934,450 Gigahashes per second. There are lots of different bitcoin mining computers out there, but in recent months, companies have focused on ASIC miners, which use less energy to conduct their calculations. Mining companies that run lots of ASIC miners as businesses have told me that they use one watt of power for every Gigahash per second of computing that they do when mining for bitcoins. At this rate, the bitcoin network runs at 342934450 watts, which equates to around 343 megawatts. Calculations based on EIA data reveal that the average US household consumes about 1.2 kilowatts of power, meaning that 343 megawatts would be enough to power 285,833 US homes at the time of writing (May 2015). Proof of Stake is Harder to Calculate , Because it is extremely more energy efficient Because it can be run as a Minimized app on a PC, while the PC is performing other Functions Example: A Web or File Server is running 24x7 anyway, running a minimized app in addition would not show any noticeable increase in electricity required So for a Large Portion of Users there will be a ZERO increase in Energy Usage. But for your example , Let's say the PC is dedicated to Proof of Stake only. Average PC runs at 100 watts. PoS network with active nodes 1 node in 24 hours uses 2.4KWh In 1 year 1 node uses 876 KWh Minimum nodes for a PoS network to run 3 nodes would use 2,628 KWh per year Larger # of Nodes 12 nodes would use 10,512 KWh per year 100 nodes would use 87,600 KWh per year 1000 nodes would use 876,000 KWh per year 10000 nodes would use 8,760 MWh per year * If the PCs were being used for other tasks or only used a few hours a day, then the energy draw would be significantly less. ;) But in a Quick Yearly Compare 10,000 PoS nodes use less than 9 MWh per year Verses BTC using Over 10,000 TeraWatts Or put another way , the BTC network uses more electricity in 1 Minute 20,580 Megawatts per minute than a Proof of Stake Network would use All Year 8,760 Megawatts per Year :D 8) FYI: BTC Energy drain calculations above only uses the ASICS, but they also have ~6000 PCs that run as Nodes to store & transmit the blockchain, and their electricity usage would be comparable to a PoS node. We also don't know if the cooling systems were included in the BTC calculations or not. When , not if a Proof of Stake takes BTC place as head of the Coin world, the energy savings will be tremendous, because as BTC keeps drawing more and more power they are raising the electricity prices across the world to compensate for the increased infrastructure to support their wastefulness. Even if you are not a miner, they are driving your electricity prices up. Title: Re: What is the power consumption of proof-of algorithms? Post by: kiklo on February 18, 2017, 07:10:01 AM How much less is the power consumption of PoW algorithms (e.g. Bitcoin) compared to PoS (let' say Nxt, but could any other PoS coin)? And how advantageous is the PoI (NEM) algorithm to PoS? I tried to find information on the Internet, but I could not find a reliable source. Power consumption difference is huge and incomparable. I dont know much of PoI, but if it would be so good i bet there would be 100+ coins using it. In general many think PoS is flawed. Biggest difference is that you need to attack network only once and is dead, while in PoW you need to keep attacking it for a kill. Those that think PoS is flawed are mistaken and are believing the Lies & propaganda spread by PoW supporters. PoS is more resistant to a 51% attack than PoW, due to coin age and minimum stake age. Once a block of coins stake, that % can no longer be used in a 51% attack until after those coins reach min stage age. So the % are always in Flux and never a constant. Where as PoW ASICS are a constant and can be used continuously, as actual history have proven the chinese mining pools have maintained ~68 % domination of BTC for over a year, it is only by their Good Graces the network has not been crashed by a 51% attack yet. PoW increasing cost & centralization caused by economics have been proven by history. Where as No Large Scale PoS coin networks has been crashed by anyone. ;) 8) |