I still remember BNB when it was $1 back in 2017.
I just wish I didnt sell it all when it got to about $10! Should have just kept it. Its always hard to tell how far a project can go.
I do think other exchanges will start taking market share from BNB slowly over time.
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This is just a guessing game really. I do like cryptocom at the moment though, also ICX like you've said. Ravencoin has been great to me - you might have missed the run but I still think it has room to grow. Plus you can mine ravencoin if you'd rather do that.
enjin and BAT also have actual functionality and are close to working products. Again, you missed some of the gains but still more to come in my opinion.
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There are so many anonymous cryptocurrencies at the moment. If you're interested in checking out a couple you could try Horizen (formerly Zencash), any of the 'z' coins (like Zcash, Zclassic, Zcoin and so on) or veil which is a fairly new project.
I think people just put a lot of value in being able to send and spend without traceability, and a lot of projects are trying to make the most of that.
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Are you still sure Claymore is faster?
he is 100% correct, the new -strap settings in Claymore are the sh*t, i can mine 34.8 MH/s on my GTX 1070 with 105W. On PhoenixMiner it's about 33 MH/s. It depends on whether you can get the straps to actually work. A lot of people, including myself, have had a hard time getting the straps to run stable. My rig crashes after about thirty minutes after having wildly fluctuating hashrates using the straps. All nvidia Gtx 1070's and 1060's. So until I figure that out, phoenixminer is faster and more stable.
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Estonia generally has a very forward leaning digital agenda.
Everyone has their own digital idenfication number which is used to interact with all government services such as healthcare, tax and other services. All these functions connect with each other very seemlessly.
It doesn't surprise me that they have a crypto friendly environment given their digital foundation and openness to embrace ICT innovation.
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It's not a contest. It's like saying you can't drive a BMW if your wife drives a Lexus. Both are fine.
I think he is saying that he is still into 'metals', so OP is agreeing with you. He is mainly pointing out that people on precious metal forums are raging about bitcoin, when really you would think they would be embracing it as almost a digital gold.
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Hmmm I wonder if that 'article' is actually a paid advertisement. Some of those names I'm not sure are really that big in the youtube crypto space.
Boxmining for example is fairly big, also I like ready set crypto for their insights.
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These new supercharged versions (both 14.6 and beta versions) have been pretty frustrating for me on GTX 1070s. Some of my cards simply cannot be made stable even with straps set to 4, sintensity set to 1, and cards using stock settings. Anyone else run into this?
* Edit * Going back a bit, seems like others with 10 series are having issues as well. Bit of a dud release for 10 series, IMO. Not worth an extra ~10% hash when it's this flaky.
My rig of 7x1070 NVIDIA cards, and claymore with strap 1runs perfectly. Instead of 32mh of one gpu with claymore 14.6 now calculating 35mh with same setup as I use in claymore 12... There are some people who are getting it to work with 1070s on strap 1, and others like me who can't get it to work on any setting. I wonder what the issue is. Maybe its something to do with other hardware in the rig? It just seems strange that for some there are zero issues, and others have fluctuating hashrate, crashes etc.
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Binance coin is essentially like buying shares in the company.
If you think Binance will continue to be a popular and profitable exchange, BNB will go up. If it doesn't BNB will likely go down.
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You could argue that gold is the roman version of the modern bitcoin.
Now I still think bitcoin is more than a store of value. Its entire principles of decentralized currency are different to typical fiat money, however at a minimum it is a modern gold.
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Some people mine for other reasons than direct profit.
Plus I already have a mining rig and cards, so why not put them to work?
And I'm bullish on ethereum, so of course I'll keep mining.
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I don't think that nvidias, at least 10 series with gddr5 like the strap changes, as there is no way to see memory errors. I stupidly did not backup my pre-strap OC, but now even my most stable, with straps, rig crashed after 122 hours 36 minutes. I wonder if maybe older drivers or windows7 are less prone to memory crashes as someone mentioned here or if is it just bullshit.
Interesting. So while strap changes are possible nvidia 10 series they don't really suit? I'm not exactly familiar with how the strap impacts the memory timings and overall rig. I'll keep experimenting as a few people have found a sweet spot. If I get any success I'll post results here.
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I'm having the same issues a few other people are having with the straps on Nvidia 1060's and 1070's.
I have tried various straps at different sintensity (all the way down to 1), split between different cards, and keep getting the same outcome. The rig starts off strong, but then the hashrate starts fluctuating wildly, with some cards dropping may 10 percent of their hashrate, and sometimes they even drop to just a couple hashes in total.
After a while of this, the rig crashes and I have to restart.
Any thoughts on what the issue could be? Six cards mainly 1060s, over 30gb virtual memory, and i'm pretty sure 8 gigs of ram, on windows (not sure if those make a difference). Also have the latest drivers (and did the '-driver install' part of setting up the miner).
I feel like I'm close to getting it to work, but just can't figure out what's causing this issue!
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You should do a market analysis before pushing out your product imo. There were a bunch of ICOs in 2017/18 looking at creating trading bots or algorithms, where their native token could be used as a monthly sign up fee, or was used for 'profit sharing'. One that comes to mind is Xchangerate for example. Many didn't last, or are just scraping by with a small devout following. Given other projects are struggling, you would probably need to have a well developed researched product to crack the market. I'm not saying your software is good or bad - but it will need to have a lot of security, evidence of performance and some points of difference to be trusted in this market.
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Pretty good read. I would have liked it if they had more detail about the individual interviews they did with refugees.
What a tough situation for these people. I have no idea how it will end but it can't go forever.
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I'm still dualmining ETH+ZIL, it should work in a different way. Once per 2-3 hours ETH miner stops and ZIL miner digs for Ziliqa blockchain during several minutes. Link above cannot show ZIL miners on ETH blockhain.
What miner do you use to mine dual mine Eth/Zil? What is the electricity rate like for dual mining those two. I remember dual mining Eth and Siacoin back in the day, was super power hungry to dual mine.
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If you got a newish GPU for those computers you could mine with it.
Your computers by themselves if mining anything (if they could) would cost more in electricity than what they could mine.
Anything like a gtx 1060 6gb or better could mine. Go to a website like whattomine to check out the differences.
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Definitely. I mean some countries are already halfway there. Japan for example, has almost a culture around vending machines. When you think about it, that isn't too far off a robot AI. As the population in many countries continues to age, like Japan, I woild assume more jobs in the service sector will make way to automation or AI. A bartender definitely seems like a job that could be automated.
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This question is coming up a lot lately on earning interest or a 'passive income' from crypto.
There are a couple options that I or someone I know have used. These are dharma io and cryptocom.
In particular, cryptocom since a lot of people hold bitcoin. You can deposit for 3 months for around 8 percent p/a equivalent return (so 2 percent profit after three months).
dharma is good for ETH or stablecoin DAI. In particular DAI was getting something like 14 percent p/a equivalent return for a while.
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