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1  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Large Bitcoin Collider Thread 2.0 on: December 19, 2017, 06:59:59 AM
Thank you very much! I'm currently looking for a vps to run this 24/7 with a better speed and should be around $50/month. Any suggestions?

Google offers $300 "credit" for newcomers to their cloud services. The most efficient hardware is 8core/7.2GB will make 3.0-3.3 megakeys a second. One server costs $150 a month. So you'll have a free server for 2 months.

I guess, buying a videocard to your own PC is much more funds-efficient.

Actually, this project lacks a reasonable comparison of different cards.
I'm not ready to buy a $1000 card like nvidia 2000, but it's totally unclear how would cheaper aftermarket cards behave.
Also, ATI cards were always much stronger for mining, is it the same for LBC?  Huh


Thanks for the advice! I actually have a decent GPU but I can't use it as I'm not auth yet I think since I only started a couple days ago and my average speed is 1,8 Mkeys/s. I'll take a look at what Google has to offer, thanks again!
2  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Large Bitcoin Collider Thread 2.0 on: December 18, 2017, 08:21:25 AM
Total newb here when it comes to linux but please take a look at the attached image and let me know if I actually started the collider



If it's started how can I see the FOUND.txt file in case something is found? Any suggestion is much appreciated.

edit: also, does 1,8 Mkeys/s mean that I'm searching through 1,800,000 keys per second?

You started the collider and you are searching with 1 800 000 keys/second.

you can see the file FOUND.txt in the same directory as the LBC client and look at is in a text editor, by doing
Code:
cat FOUND.txt
or
Code:
less FOUND.txt



Thank you very much! I'm currently looking for a vps to run this 24/7 with a better speed and should be around $50/month. Any suggestions?
3  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Large Bitcoin Collider Thread 2.0 on: December 17, 2017, 09:15:19 PM
Total newb here when it comes to linux but please take a look at the attached image and let me know if I actually started the collider



If it's started how can I see the FOUND.txt file in case something is found? Any suggestion is much appreciated.

edit: also, does 1,8 Mkeys/s mean that I'm searching through 1,800,000 keys per second?
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