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Alternate cryptocurrencies => Altcoin Discussion => Topic started by: barwizi on October 21, 2013, 02:44:18 PM



Title: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: barwizi on October 21, 2013, 02:44:18 PM
any ideas?


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: VforVictory on October 21, 2013, 02:49:44 PM
I would think Primecoin(XPM), that's probably about it for CPUs....


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: Fablio2 on October 21, 2013, 03:30:06 PM
Nothing really is profitable now..
+1


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: FiatKiller on October 21, 2013, 03:34:43 PM
Only thing profitable is to get a first month ASIC order of the latest leading edge hashing speed. If you cannot afford that, then just buy BTC as an investment. I learned this the hard way. You have to go BIG or go home as they say...


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: Come-from-Beyond on October 21, 2013, 04:06:47 PM
any ideas?

Nxt. It doesn't require even a CPU. :D


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: testz on October 21, 2013, 11:43:19 PM
XPM, because it's only one pure CPU coin. Mine XPM or don't mine at all, to mine all others coins with CPU = wasting the time.


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: bitwarrior on October 21, 2013, 11:51:04 PM
I guess XPM.. nothing more and nothing less...


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: SpeedDemon13 on October 22, 2013, 12:10:45 AM
Primecoin (XPM) is the best to mine as far as CPU. Blakecoin (BLC) looks promising, but it can be mined by CPU, FPGA and soon to be GPU. Whenever BLC hits a market. But currently, I would say XPM....


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: skaffen on October 22, 2013, 08:56:30 AM
Quarkcoin is still around.  It is CPU only as far as I know.


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: viboracecata on October 22, 2013, 09:39:37 AM
Nothing really is profitable now..
Yep


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: smolen on October 22, 2013, 09:54:56 AM
Quarkcoin is still around.  It is CPU only as far as I know.
Shameless plug - there is GPU miner (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=310975) for Quark, Securecoin and Offerings. Performance is poor on GCN cards, but owners of old 6xxx Radeons can give it a try.


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: dmatthewstewart on October 22, 2013, 11:51:21 AM
Agree thatnothing is really profitable now but you can at least get some coins from a pay per share pool on coins with a really low difficulty. For example, Digger has a Xen Coin pool and BBQ Coin pool that I used to cpu mine

xen.ltcoin.net

bbq.ltcoin.net


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: evansearle42 on October 22, 2013, 11:57:28 AM
Nothing really is profitable now..

This, the era for CPU is gone....


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: barwizi on October 22, 2013, 06:01:24 PM
in that case i'll begin work on NoirTokens and make it a cpu coin.

The benefits are clear

- cpu is cheap to acquire
- cpu mining is energy afficient in comparison to GPU ( most miners dont own FPGA and ASICs)
- save for botnets, it is pretty fair
- longer viability of mining if the specs are ryt
- less attention needy


i once suggested pledge backing and floating value directly exchangeable for USD, maybe i'll try implement that here.


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: juve4v on October 22, 2013, 07:10:03 PM
XPM
SRC
BLC


Title: Re: What is profitable to CPU mine?
Post by: markm on October 22, 2013, 07:21:30 PM
Take a look at http://www.devtome.com/doku.php?id=cpu_mining

Even a raspberry pi or a beaglebone or something on that scale can be very competitive, and it still looks like it will resist botnets quite well for quite a while yet.

You should always bear in mind that pretty much any "make money on the internet" scheme is only a certain size of pie so the more people who start taking a slice of the pie the less pie they each get. Thus ideally you want things that the masses of computer-illiterate Windows-user types are going to think is too complicated or too hard or not GUI-enough; as once even the most illiterate such users can just "plug and play" the pie gets sliced up into so many parts the amount each slicer gets is so tiny as to hardly be worth bothering with.

This system takes advantage of that by deliberately using a text-type API without the overhead of graphics, so that you can do more stuff with less processing power and bandwidth and, maybe more important, the people who insist everything has to be GUI/graphical will turn up their noses at it, thus leaving more of the pie for people who are literate.

-MarkM-