Bitcoin Forum

Bitcoin => Bitcoin Technical Support => Topic started by: filo_gost on September 03, 2010, 03:52:03 AM



Title: all port open and i cant download more blocks
Post by: filo_gost on September 03, 2010, 03:52:03 AM
:S see the pictures by yourself


first pic see the time and the blocks


sec pic see the same blocks and the time again


:S?


Title: Re: all port open and i cant download more blocks
Post by: m0mchil on September 03, 2010, 05:37:31 AM
You have downloaded all existing blocks already. At this moment there will be new block roughly every 10 minutes. It will validate all transactions made since last block.

With your hash rate of ~750 khash/s it would take on average 40 days YOU to find the next block. However, this is not guaranteed - it's more like a lottery.

Take a look at the FAQ (http://www.bitcoin.org/faq).


Title: Re: all port open and i cant download more blocks
Post by: filo_gost on September 03, 2010, 06:15:59 AM
so what i need to do ?

:S

w8 40 days? :S


Title: Re: all port open and i cant download more blocks
Post by: mizerydearia on September 03, 2010, 07:10:11 AM
You can glance at http://nullvoid.org/bitcoin for some data to look at.


Title: Re: all port open and i cant download more blocks
Post by: MoonShadow on September 03, 2010, 06:41:41 PM
so what i need to do ?

:S

w8 40 days? :S


Try selling something to someone in the community.  Or, if there is nothing that you can make particularly well, get a job and buy some bitcoins.  If it were easy to generate bitcoins, the system wouldn't work.

Based only on your 'texting' style of writing, I'm guessing that you're an adolecent, so a job might be hard to come by under normal circumstances.  If so, and the accumulation of bitcoins (to purchase stuff online or whatever) is your primary goal, try and find out if there are any computer and/or Internet related businesses near your home.  If you are so lucky, try offering them your services as a 'co-op' to the Internet companies or an "unpaid" tech apprentice to the computer companies, and ask for access to computer-clock time as a benefit.  ISP's are a very good choice, as they need cheap/talented young help on a lot of what they do to maintain the hardware uptime, and are likely to have vast amounts of off-hour CPU cycles.  Don't think that any bitcoins that you get out of the arrangement are the more valuable of the benefits, for you would almost certainly learn some technical skills that will prove more valuable than any paycheck.

Be upfront about your intentions of using the company's resources to generate bitcoins for yourself, never be cryptic about your goals with the companies, or you will never make it near the hardware.