I hope equihash would be asic resistant for a very long period of time
|
|
|
The more limitations you put on a character, often times the better a character you'll make them, the more interesting the story becomes because the character can't simply wave a hand and make something happen. They have to work within the framework. - Brandon Sanderson Now we all know ariel is a character we created to entertain us here on this forum and for the most part that worked out really well but nonetheless i would like to implore on all of you to avoid putting too much limitations and stress on ariel so it doesn't end up outgrowing its character. Luckily for us ariel doesn't know its a character and therefore limited to work from within the framework, this gives us a clear advantage... To ariel : you are doing a fine job my son, carry on... no problem buddy..you are welcome i have my characters here though https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1282836.0 this gives us a clear advantage to take a step back and rethink the crap that is coming out of the mouths of these characters.
|
|
|
now we just need our little mermaid and we have our old troll-gang back come on ariel, i know yr reading this... give us a little sign of life sorry i'm late. how that's for a little sign of life? haven't seen this picture in this thread for quite a while..since crypto coins / bitcointalk is lively again with people, mining, trading, speculating, investing etc... a little reminder would help BTW i have updated your information here https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1282836.msg13200467#msg13200467...hey, can you ask renegademan to answer my question in this thread too, that guy responds always with a long story, maybe he could tell me what is his love at first sight story with darkcoin.. you are now a "legendary" loud mouth
|
|
|
for the people having sync issues out here, specially for solo mining...this one fixed my syncing issue. Geth 1.4.6 "EDGE" aims to solve the synchronization issues resulting from this newly found heterogeneity: it introduces a lot more download concurrency to avoid bottlenecks caused by badly connected remote machines, and also introduces adaptive quality-of-service tuning to make peer selection less aggressive for users with more restricted connectivity. The result is a newly polished sync mechanism that can churn out a 7-8MB/s download speed in the current Ethereum main network (if your connectivity allows it), but also provide a solid and stable stream for all users, verified for as low as EDGE connections (440ms latency, 200 kbps upstream, 220kbps downstream). https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/releases/tag/v1.4.6https://www.reddit.com/r/ethereum/comments/4mtnz3/geth_146_edge_making_sync_great_again/ well.. i'm gonna try solo mining now
|
|
|
can anyone provide instructions link for beginner to mining?
try the beginning of this thread
|
|
|
besides i'll always have my GNS3 laboratory on my PC with i7 3770 and 16gb ram, tapos na ang q9550 8gb days ko hehe.
Meron ako lumang server, 32 GB RAM, Xeon E5640. Ano recommend mo set up? Naka Hyper-V naman, so pwede gumawa ng VMs. (Pwede yata nested virtualization.) hindi ko alam kung ano ang plano mo sa nested virtualization, sa VM mo papatakbuhin ang gns3? hindi ko pa ginawa sa gns3 yan, baka magkaproblema sa "idle pc" yan. kung dedicated PC na yan para sa gns3..okay na yan, siguro kung ilalagay mo sa SSD yung mga images na iloload (working directory or the whole gns3 folders) sa gns3 masbibilis pa yan (opening/loading gns3 only specially kung maraming images ng routers ang iloload).. 32gb RAM is more than enough..pag gagawa at magrurun ka ng VMs masmagandang windows 2000 gamitin mo, 128 MB ram per VM okay na. sa CPU naman basta ma-iset mo yung idle pc, relax na yan....tumataas lang ang CPU usage kung tumatakbo na ang protocols at dumadaan na ang real traffic..maoobserve mo yan kung mag transfer ka ng file tapos dadaan siya sa routers and switch (NM-16ESW on a router).
|
|
|
Geth 1.4.6 "EDGE" aims to solve the synchronization issues resulting from this newly found heterogeneity: it introduces a lot more download concurrency to avoid bottlenecks caused by badly connected remote machines, and also introduces adaptive quality-of-service tuning to make peer selection less aggressive for users with more restricted connectivity. The result is a newly polished sync mechanism that can churn out a 7-8MB/s download speed in the current Ethereum main network (if your connectivity allows it), but also provide a solid and stable stream for all users, verified for as low as EDGE connections (440ms latency, 200 kbps upstream, 220kbps downstream). https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/releases/tag/v1.4.6https://www.reddit.com/r/ethereum/comments/4mtnz3/geth_146_edge_making_sync_great_again/ my wallet is now syncing.... this works!
|
|
|
hindi ako expert sa network...as of now hindi rin ako network engineer, at hindi pa rin ako CCNA, as in zero .... i have not taken a single exam yet... frustrating isn't it?.
Doesn't matter, but if you still want to take your CCNA now, version 2.0 exams are expiring in August and September 2016. After that it will be version 3.0 na. They will drop Frame Relay in version 3. Anyway, since v2 and pinag-aralan namen, yun ang kukunin kong exams. 200-120 CCNA v2.0 Last day to test: August 20, 2016 The CCNA Routing and Switching exams and trainings are being revised from v2.0 to v3.0. Candidates can choose to take either the version 2.0 exams or version 3.0 exams. The last day to test for the 200-120 CCNA v2.0 and 100-101 ICND1 v2.0 exams will be August 20, 2016. The last day to test for the 200-101 ICND2 v2.0 exam will be September 24, 2016. Anyway, nandoon sa official website nila. good luck po sa exam. hindi naman ako nagmamadali, at ang sitwasyon ko ngayon ay hindi pa para maka exam, mga end of this year or early next year ang plano ko mag exam...sabi ko nga upthread kung naiintinhan ng isang tao ang principles at concept madali lang magdagdag kung ano ang bago..besides i'll always have my GNS3 laboratory on my PC with i7 3770 and 16gb ram, tapos na ang q9550 8gb days ko hehe.
|
|
|
who the hell is this? LOL
|
|
|
Pwede, pero post mo na lang o gawa new thread, para makita ng iba. Baka makasagot pa yung iba, kasi I am still going to get my CCNA, hindi pa ako nag exam. Meron mga nandito na CCNA na, o CCNP o CCIE na, syempre mas makakasagot sila.
sabagay boss dabs may point ka atleast makikita nung ibang mga certified na at makasali sa topic na yun salamat sa mga beginner na tech savvy (technician level), yung ng mga experienced na or yung may mga talent talaga magbutingting at maglaro ng mga technology at protocols pwede na kayo mag simula sa GNS3..
huwag kang miniwala sa mga nagsasabing sa mga nag CCNP level na yang GNS3...ang GNS3 pinagaaralan din, konting tyaga lang...parang english, pag marunong ka nang mag english maski sinong amerikano pwede mo nang kausapin...ang tanong kailan ka pa magaaral ng english?pag nasa pilipinas ka pa o pag nasa amerika ka na?....study GNS3 before CCNA or before CCNP? advise ko sa mga beginners dyan before CCNA... siguradong mas smooth na ang direksyon mo papuntang CCNP pag marunong ka na ng GNS3.
GNS3 is bad for business...sa mga school na may cisco subjects (optional) in preparation sa mga students nila na mag eexam for CCNA, sa mga bootcamp for CCNA, they boast their laboratories and equipment... just study the concepts, principles, protocols, TCP/IP, OSI model ...
i forgot where i read this statement -> "Cisco is a software company", masterin ang IOS (internet operating system) ng Cisco... ang real hardware madaling pagaralan isang araw lang alam mo na kung alin ang isasaksak, saan isasaksak at kung alin ang pipindutin..
boss ariel mukhang masteral mo na talaga itong topic sa networking hehe ask ko lang po kung ilang taon kana sa larangan? at ano anong mga bagay mabibigay mong mga tips sa mga gusto maging network engineer? nagsimula akos sa pag aayos ng PC noong high school pa lang ako, tapos early college nagttroubleshoot at setup na ako ng basic networks..meron kami sa college naming Cisco optional/elective subjects na macocomplete sa 4 na semester...pero mas marami pa akong natutunan sa 2 months sa pag GNS3 ko kaysa sa 4 na semester sa school, dahil sa tingin ko boring sa school dahil.. 1. siksikan kayo sa equipment. 2. puro basa, kulang sa hands on 3. oras ng school ang masusunod hindi oras mo..for learning sa GNS3 ang pagbasa at hands on sabay sabay, at magaaral ka sa comfortable na oras at mood mo kasi nasa computer mo na yung equipment mo...at solo mo ang laboratoryo mo hehe. hindi ako expert sa network...as of now hindi rin ako network engineer, at hindi pa rin ako CCNA, as in zero .... i have not taken a single exam yet... frustrating isn't it?. gusto ko lang i share ang GNS3 sa inyo at ang kapangyarihan nito hehe.. isipin mo noong 2009 sa GNS3 ko, my call manager express connected sa VMWARE na may Cisco/SIP softphone (windows 2000) na nakakatawag back and forth sa cell phone ko (wala pa akong smartphone noon na touch screen, nokia n82 pa lang gamit ko), dahil naka SIP trunk yung router ko sa GNS3 sa isang ITSP (internet telephony service provider)...that's how cool GNS3 is. tanda ko meron pang syntax noon na kailangan ko sa SIP trunking na binili ko sa isang CCIE, yung syntax na yun hindi lumalabas sa command prompt ng cisco IOS (display commands) pero pag tnype mo papasok at gagana siya sa system, siguro mga 20 - 40 $ yata yung binayad ko sa CCIE na yun... ngayon nakapublish na yung syntax na yun sa libro ng network warrior 2nd edition hehe.. wala akong track record ng accomplishments para magkaroon ng boses o dating sa mga networking, pero alam ko kung ano ang lalim ng naabot ko sa pagaaral, experiment, at laro ng GNS3...ang masasabi ko ay "PASSION" ang magddrive sa iyo, paano ka magkakaroon ng passion kung.. 1. wala kang hardware o pambili ng hardware 2. hindi tunay na network ang pinaglalaruan mo dapat you are dealing with "real packets" or "real traffic", kung sa packet tracer ka nag ping, makikita mo sa simulator ay ping na fake, sa GNS3 tunay na ping packets ang makikita mo..gawa ka ng servers, magtransfer ka ng files, panoorin mo ang traffic etc. noong pinagaralan ko ang diskless server ginamit ko ang GNS3 para ma simulate kung paano ang setup nito, within a month natutunan at sinetup ko na sa internet cafe ng friend ko... P.S. lagi kong ginagamit ang salitang "laro" dahil pag may passion ka, it should be fun at idagdag ko ito "PERSEVEREANCE" yung adviser ko nga na ang tagal nang nagtuturo ng networking at Cisco sa college namin, sinabihan ako na hindi daw feasible ang project ko, diniscourage pa niya ako with sabotage tsk tsk...well hindi niya alam ang kapangyarihan ng GNS3, kaya kong iprovide lahat ng kailangan para masagot ang mga katanungan nila dahil parang may "real equipment" ako .. 2009 pa ito, bagong labas pa lang ang CCNA voice exam noon, yung project resources and references ko ay.. 30% CCNA R&S and VOICE 60% CCNP R&S and VOICE 10% CCIE R&S and VOICE
|
|
|
kung Cisco / Networking ang pag uusapan... GNS3
pag marunong kang paglaruan ito, hindi mo na kailangan pumunta sa anumang lugar/school/bootcamp na may laboratory.
Ok din yan. But not recommended daw for beginner level, eh, marami naman simulator and packet tracer. Ang alam ko, GNS3 para sa mga mag CCNP. Yung mga mag CCIE, kulang na daw yan (daw.) And in any case, kailangan mo parin ng maraming RAM. For now, masaya na ako sa Packet Tracer at sa Simulator. Maybe later on kuha parin ako ng real hardware. syempre kulang na yan sa mga nag CCIE kasi yung latest na IOS ng cisco hindi na kayang iemulate nyan, pero majority ng kailangan nandyan na, lagi namang TCP/IP at OSI model yang networking...parang sa PC, kung marunong kang magtroubleshoot noong 1995 ngayong 2016 parehas lang ang concept, may mga bagong dagdag lang pero.. dagdag lang hindi totally overhaul ng mga principles.. sa mga beginner na tech savvy (technician level), yung ng mga experienced na or yung may mga talent talaga magbutingting at maglaro ng mga technology at protocols pwede na kayo mag simula sa GNS3.. pinatakbo ko na yang GNS3 noon sa Pentium D 3.0ghz 4gb ram noong 2008.. 2009 nakabwelo ako na paglaruan ko yan sa Q9550 at 8gb ram,...ang dami mo nang pwdeng magawa dyan sa GNS3 lalo na pag sinamahan mo nang VMWARE.. napaglaruan ko dito na sabaysabay na gumagana ang load balancing, QOS (using real traffic), VOIP (using callmanager express at softphones in VM windows 2000), packet capture at analysis gamit ang wireshark...yan ang ginamit ko sa thesis ko, nag design at nag simulate ako ng VOIP/IP telephony na nakadesign para sa school namin... pwede rin yang ikabit sa real hardware btw.. makakatipid ka kung i susuplement mo ang GNS3 sa real hardware, most routing protocols nandyan na... sa switching naman yung NM-16ESW lang ang kayang iemulate ng GNS3, kaya pag dating sa real hardware iprioritize mo ang cisco switch (ikabit mo sa GNS3). imagine what you can do with GNS3 sa mga modelong computer ngayon. once na natutuhan mong gamitin yang GNS3 sir hindi ka na babalik sa packet tracer at mga simulator na yan...in GNS3 you are dealing with "real packets" and "real traffic". huwag kang miniwala sa mga nagsasabing sa mga nag CCNP level na yang GNS3...ang GNS3 pinagaaralan din, konting tyaga lang...parang english, pag marunong ka nang mag english maski sinong amerikano pwede mo nang kausapin...ang tanong kailan ka pa magaaral ng english?pag nasa pilipinas ka pa o pag nasa amerika ka na?....study GNS3 before CCNA or before CCNP? advise ko sa mga beginners dyan before CCNA... siguradong mas smooth na ang direksyon mo papuntang CCNP pag marunong ka na ng GNS3. GNS3 is bad for business...sa mga school na may cisco subjects (optional) in preparation sa mga students nila na mag eexam for CCNA, sa mga bootcamp for CCNA, they boast their laboratories and equipment... just study the concepts, principles, protocols, TCP/IP, OSI model ... i forgot where i read this statement -> "Cisco is a software company", masterin ang IOS (internet operating system) ng Cisco... ang real hardware madaling pagaralan isang araw lang alam mo na kung alin ang isasaksak, saan isasaksak at kung alin ang pipindutin..
|
|
|
@Darwin84
500$ a month for parking? from where i live there is no parking fee around here, there is insurance that cost 6 to 11 $ a month, a computer is already a toy, i don't get why people want to play with gadgets, i have a 24 inch monitor and a lot of GPUs to use for gaming. a used motherboard for my mining rigs costs 28$ max, for bike injury you just need an alcohol and terramycin.
That's downtown Toronto. $300-$600 a month, depends on security and covered or not and that's just work, you need another $100 or so to park at home. Great so you have a life of GPUs and gaming in a deadbeat farming town and you fix yourself with alcohol. That's a waste of life to most people. I'm not judging but don't pass this off as advice. You'll be on the streets of a big city soon enough when you're first major life upset happens that you can't fix with $500. Good luck i'm in a city, in a province..if you read up thread i said i can do 300-350$ "happily" ... the minimum wage here is ~175$ LOL ..i'm fine with 500$ my location is a comfortable one, i'm even planning to buy a piece of property around here with my savings, 3 malls are in a biking/walking distance, a 4th one is being made, two hospitals are walking distance and a 5 minute commute to the city square. a metropolis provides higher wages because of higher standard of living..here is a sweet blend of provincial and city living
|
|
|
Kailangan meron ka private lab sa bahay, even if you have access to school labs or online labs. Iba parin pag meron ka sarili. Yung private lab mo, lumang server na meron dual processor (na quad core or hexa core), SSD, and at least 24GB to 32GB or 48GB or more of RAM, para makagawa ka ng maraming virtual machines.
Kasi, meron ka nga maraming certs, yung boss mo mag interview parin sayo, tandaan mo yan.
kung Cisco / Networking ang pag uusapan... GNS3 pag marunong kang paglaruan ito, hindi mo na kailangan pumunta sa anumang lugar/school/bootcamp na may laboratory.
|
|
|
@Darwin84
500$ a month for parking? from where i live there is no parking fee around here, there is insurance that cost 6 to 11 $ a month, a computer is already a toy, i don't get why people want to play with gadgets, i have a 24 inch monitor and a lot of GPUs to use for gaming. a used motherboard for my mining rigs costs 28$ max, for bike injury you just need an alcohol and terramycin.
|
|
|
@arielbit A quick and dirty grounding trick that I used way back when, was to make a connection to a old metal heater installed in the room. It is grounded so connecting to it grounded the equipment that I had. I think I had a old computer, ungrounded, and had a humming background noise while listening to music. By doing this "foolish" hack, the humming went away. I'm not sure connecting high wattage usage mining rigs to a heater is the right way to go, but maybe it's worth trying out if you tend to get "tickled" every now and then.
most likely the electricity that's leaking to the ground of your audio's ground is causing the disturbance/humming/noise.. there is no heater here, the metal window grill is here is a good ground..how do i know it? i use the live 240V wire and used that ground as a neutral to run a 1000w flat iron runs (at full heating)...typically a not so good ground can run an electric fan or a TV, but not 1000W or more load... somehow i think the metal grills must have been connected to the metal intertwined underneath the cement and connecting into the foundation. in our place, digging the soil at about 1 meter depth it is already moist or watery...ground here is good.
|
|
|
i always prefer wood over metal...
in using metal, sometimes electricity will tickle you if you have contact while fixing and tinkering.
that's because it has not done right, with the motherboard maybe touching something, because everyhting else is isolated in multiple rigs and multiple gpus, your mind focused on troubleshooting....everyone gets that tickle whether noobs or experts LOL from time to time even the metal part of the gpus where you screw them to the cage/case/shelf have some electricity..that's a lot of metal contact to insulate.. and people should ground that metal cage/case/shelf.. all that metal is a potential shorting hazard to any electronic contacts btw. the metal part where you screw the gpu to the top of the frame are isolated, i touched thems many times nothing come from there just making sure we are on the same page here..this part.. https://i.imgur.com/kp0RBuKl.jpg?1you will serve as a ground if you don't wear shoes or slippers, your feet is a little bit moist on the cement floor... or you touch two metals from different gpus or any metal from an electronic device that is plugged in, the current will pass through you..there are cases that you might and might not get the electric tickles.. it is kinda better now that the trend of a lot of gpus now is to have a back plate, some how it protects any electronic contact points there yes talking about that part, i touchd it many times, even now i can go to my rig and touch it, nothin happen, dunno what kinda of gpu you are using that let electricity pass there about the black plate yes using g1 gaming here they feel safer for sure from where you live your electrical cabling must have earthing system or grounding system (with ground wire), here it is only two wires, the live wire and the neutral wire.. these connections are not utilized here. https://i.imgur.com/bAf2Fgi.jpThat is why you get shocked, chassis ground, the pins you do not use, is what all metallic part mounting areas are grounded. If this is floating with no connection to earth ground, you can get shocked and you can die with only 200 milliamps of current. these old electrical lines here were made without grounding...i could make one for my rigs, i know a good ground here. i've been tickled a lot of time in my lifetime lol, don't worry it's a good experience and i know what i'm doing and these type of lines are widely used here.
|
|
|
i always prefer wood over metal...
in using metal, sometimes electricity will tickle you if you have contact while fixing and tinkering.
that's because it has not done right, with the motherboard maybe touching something, because everyhting else is isolated in multiple rigs and multiple gpus, your mind focused on troubleshooting....everyone gets that tickle whether noobs or experts LOL from time to time even the metal part of the gpus where you screw them to the cage/case/shelf have some electricity..that's a lot of metal contact to insulate.. and people should ground that metal cage/case/shelf.. all that metal is a potential shorting hazard to any electronic contacts btw. the metal part where you screw the gpu to the top of the frame are isolated, i touched thems many times nothing come from there just making sure we are on the same page here..this part.. https://i.imgur.com/kp0RBuKl.jpg?1you will serve as a ground if you don't wear shoes or slippers, your feet is a little bit moist on the cement floor... or you touch two metals from different gpus or any metal from an electronic device that is plugged in, the current will pass through you..there are cases that you might and might not get the electric tickles.. it is kinda better now that the trend of a lot of gpus now is to have a back plate, some how it protects any electronic contact points there yes talking about that part, i touchd it many times, even now i can go to my rig and touch it, nothin happen, dunno what kinda of gpu you are using that let electricity pass there about the black plate yes using g1 gaming here they feel safer for sure from where you live your electrical cabling must have earthing system or grounding system (with ground wire), here it is only two wires, the live wire and the neutral wire.. these connections are not utilized here.
|
|
|
i always prefer wood over metal...
in using metal, sometimes electricity will tickle you if you have contact while fixing and tinkering.
that's because it has not done right, with the motherboard maybe touching something, because everyhting else is isolated in multiple rigs and multiple gpus, your mind focused on troubleshooting....everyone gets that tickle whether noobs or experts LOL from time to time even the metal part of the gpus where you screw them to the cage/case/shelf have some electricity..that's a lot of metal contact to insulate.. and people should ground that metal cage/case/shelf.. all that metal is a potential shorting hazard to any electronic contacts btw. the metal part where you screw the gpu to the top of the frame are isolated, i touched thems many times nothing come from there just making sure we are on the same page here..this part.. you will serve as a ground if you don't wear shoes or slippers, your feet is a little bit moist on the cement floor... or you touch two metals from different gpus or any metal from an electronic device that is plugged in, the current will pass through you..there are cases that you might and might not get the electric tickles.. it is kinda better now that the trend of a lot of gpus now is to have a back plate, some how it protects any electronic contact points there
|
|
|
i always prefer wood over metal...
in using metal, sometimes electricity will tickle you if you have contact while fixing and tinkering.
that's because it has not done right, with the motherboard maybe touching something, because everyhting else is isolated in multiple rigs and multiple gpus, your mind focused on troubleshooting....everyone gets that tickle whether noobs or experts LOL from time to time even the metal part of the gpus where you screw them to the cage/case/shelf have some electricity..that's a lot of metal contact to insulate.. and people should ground that metal cage/case/shelf.. all that metal is a potential shorting hazard to any electronic contacts btw.
|
|
|
|