Updated SoloMiner binaries with a up-to-date hash function
THANKS!!! 7x increase on Win7-64 What CPU are you using?
|
|
|
You should add instructions for the linux version from the site to the main post. It's not that trivial. Like, at all.
|
|
|
Looks like an x-men logo... kinda sorta F-men, to be precise. F-men!? Oh. Okay. Now I got it, lol. Hard to understand such complicated logo.
|
|
|
Hey guys!
Please update your binaries - new version is released - introducing faster hash function (MRO like)
THANKS!!!! Working great on Ubuntu 14.04 and Xubuntu 14.04. You rock! Working great on win64 as well. Keep up the good job. Tested on win32 laptop - no problemo. Though I don't recommend people to mine on laptops, especially during the summer.
|
|
|
Hey guys!
Please update your binaries - new version is released - introducing faster hash function (MRO like)
THANKS!!!! Working great on Ubuntu 14.04 and Xubuntu 14.04. You rock! Working great on win64 as well. Keep up the good job.
|
|
|
My setup (all 64-bit):
Computer 1 (dedicated miner): Ubuntu 14.04 desktop, A8 3.8GHz processor, running daemons for BCN and FCN, and has the wallets for BCN and FCN. No Solominer.
Computer 2: (my home computer): Windows 7 desktop, i3 3GHz processor. Runs Solominer on 1 thread in the day while I'm using it, 2 threads at night.
Computer 3: (laptop): Xubuntu 14.04, i5 3GHz processor. Runs Solominer on 3 of the 4 threads. Mining on a laptop is NOT recommended. The only reason I do it is because I got this one really cheap and it came without a hard drive (runs Xubuntu from a USB flash drive). If it breaks, it breaks. Repost from the main thread. I think this is the optimal setup for MM mining, or pretty much every mining. Don't put all eggs in 1 basket! Golden Bitcoin wallet rule applies here too.
|
|
|
Looks like an x-men logo... kinda sorta F-men, to be precise.
|
|
|
Just trying to get a sense of the communities experience.
|
|
|
we need more of these. today.
Why? What is the advantage to dark pools?
|
|
|
Do all CPUs--no matter their strength--produce the same amount of coins at the same rate?
Heh, CPUs for mining bitcoin, wouldn't that be nice.
|
|
|
It looks like we are having a bit of a bull trap - the price has gone up the past couple days, so all the exuberant bulls will buy up coins just to see the price go down again and lose them their money.
|
|
|
Hello,
Would anyone be so kind to explain what would happen if a popular online game adopted bitcoin as a main in-game currency please? I wonder if bitcoin network can really transfer large amounts of transactions. Is it technically possible to for example - have bitcoin in World of Warcraft instead of virtual gold?
If it's not suitable now, can it be suitable in the future? What needs to be changed? What are the limitations?
Thanks,
If a game used bitcoins, people would send bitcoins to fund an account and withdraw bitcoins sometimes, but any internal game transactions would be kept by the game, so there would not be a need for a huge number of transactions on the blockchain. Bitcoin takes an hour to confirm, for small in game purchases there is just no need for such security measures as bitcoin provides.
|
|
|
Looks like bitcoins are on sale - grab them while they are cheap!
Meh, it is just the giant bubble deflating. Sell some now and buy them back when the price drops below $40.
|
|
|
bitcoinbear 12no1HCanmnPoQ7rrG8XzTRvonS4hgnV1s I don't understand why you would do this, but hey, I am not one to shy away from free bitcoins To prove you have the bitcoins and this is not just a scam to get a list of everybodies bitcoin addresses (although, I have no idea what you would do with that information?), could you list the address where the 1 btc is currently? Also, if somebody posts this as their first post, and then makes four more posts, wouldn't that make them eligible?
|
|
|
how bright was the light? lol
Very bright. As in, a bright idea. Bitcoin is a bright idea which will enlighten the world. Meh, bitcoins have some nice features, but they are still limited to a very small number of transactions (relative to the total number of transactions made globally), and the massive size of the ever-expanding blockchain seems like an inelegant solution.
|
|
|
Not out of my way, but whenever I see a place where bitcoins would be better/faster/more secure I point that out to the people I am with.
|
|
|
I am planning to cash out several hundred thousand BTC so I can buy a new house this week.
Place your buy order now, this is the only warning you will get.
|
|
|
We need a sub forum just for people to bitch about alt coins.
We have one of those, it is called "Alternate Cryptocurrencies"
|
|
|
I am reading documentation and listed recommending readings for newbies and I get the basics, but I don't get the details.
1. The only way to purchase bitcoins is from someone who has them, right? 2. And am I suppose to do formulations to figure out how much I want? 3. I can't just buy $1,000 USD worth of bit coins or $1,000 pesos of bit coins? 4.And I am not able to find out how to receive actually cash for these? How do I cash out? money gets sent to bank? Debit Card? 5. I downloaded bitcoin-qt and i am out of sync it says.
Basically what I am saying is that all of the general overview makes sense, but I can't seem to find details on how to do this. What's the process?
1. You can buy bitcoins from other people that have them, or you can sell items to people who have bitcoins, or you can borrow bitcoins (but you will have to do one of the other things to get some to pay them back later) or you can have your computer process bitcoin transactions and get paid new bitcoins (a process called "mining", but you would need to have some specialized hardware to do that). 2. If you want to buy something worth 250 USD and bitcoins cost 107.20 USD/BTC, then you would buy 250/107.2 = 2.3321 BTC. It is a simple formula, if you have the USD amount, divide by the exchange rate to get the BTC amount, or if you know the BTC amount you just multiply by the exchange rate to get the USD amount. It is the same as converting between USD and EUR or any other currency. 3. Sure you can, remember that bitcoins are divisible down to 8 decimal places, so you could trade a US penny for 0.00009328 BTC, or you could send somebody 1000 USD and have them send you 9.32835820 BTC. 4. You can trade with somebody directly or you can use one of the exchange site (mtgox.com, bitstamp.net, campbx.com, or many more), each exchange site has a different selection of ways to cash out to your bank account. 5. Yes, bitcoin-qt takes a long time to sync with the network, essentially it is going through the entire 5 year history of bitcoins and validating every single transaction. Once it gets synced keeping it up to date does not take so much time. Meanwhile, if you want to use bitcoins you could check out a webwallet like blockchain.info/wallet, they are secure and seem to be the most used webwallet.
|
|
|
|