litecoin111
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January 19, 2016, 01:05:13 AM |
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Keep getting pool o slow/down or invalid error, please help?
.bat:
setx GPU_MAX_ALLOC_PERCENT 100 setx GPU_USE_SYNC_OBJECTS 1 sgminer -I 20 pause
spreadcoin.conf:
rpcuser=user rpcpassword=pass rpcallowip=127.0.0.1 rpcport=41677 port=41678 gen=0 server=1
gen=0 signifies the wallet to NOT generate coins ... solomining requires you generate coins within the wallet - so change that to gen=1 ... its been a while since ive mined spr - and it was usually spreadminer-spmod ( nvidia ) that i mined with ... i could never get the amd miner to compile and work ... so if there is any help current miners would give - that will help you a great deal ... lots of talented people in this thread ... #crysx Thanks I am using AMD cards tried gen=1 still same error
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Grim
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January 19, 2016, 02:00:52 AM |
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gen=1
is for the inwallet CPU miner.
so pls spare your poor cpu and put it to gen=0 again!
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chrysophylax
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--- ChainWorks Industries ---
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January 19, 2016, 03:02:23 AM |
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gen=1
is for the inwallet CPU miner.
so pls spare your poor cpu and put it to gen=0 again!
really? ... so the code stipulates that gen=0/1 for CPU ONLY? ... right - ok ... #crysx
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chrysophylax
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January 19, 2016, 03:03:23 AM |
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...... lots of talented people in this thread ...
#crysx
Especially the big bad Wolf0. He's got a great amd miner, but you need to figure out the magic words to get hold of it. magic word = btc ... and 'please' of course ... his work is not for free ... #crysx
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Propagandalf
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January 19, 2016, 10:02:50 AM |
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Any point in GPU mining with 1x GeForce GTX 860M, or will I never find any coins?
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just2laff
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January 19, 2016, 10:23:07 AM |
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It's possible to find a block, occasionally. It depends on what you want to make. I wouldn't stress a laptop like that, though
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coins101
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January 19, 2016, 11:21:03 AM |
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.... I'd need ideas/speculation on types of income streams and how much they could produce. How the 'business' [nodes] would be structured. Stuff like that thanks BTW, i stlll have the address that the 16000 spr are in SPrdeF1KU5CreLH2TYdnhNmZMAmoBbEynYDamn. hmm. I guess you're right. We need to do some work on the data market income potential. I have 0 knowledge about. If you could feed me numbers on potential income apart from coinbase reward I can start to play. I wonder if wolf0 could make an OP vangen miner and mine that address I think the only way we can do this bit is to give away a few secrets... 1. The data market is the data market. People will be able to subscribe on a monthly basis and pull data out as and when, provided they remain subscribed. Lets say $300 / month per region and $1,000 / monthly globally? How many customers? That's the big question. How many banks are there; how many insurance firms; how many mobile phone retailers; etc. 80 national (in total) /20 global customers in the first year, and an annual growth rate of 100% thereafter? We can't go into why that number makes sense to me, just yet. 2. BI tools. We are aiming for affiliate / partner fees from people that buy BI tools via SPR. Let's allow $10,000 for the first year in affiliate fees, and then $30,000 for the next two years, with a growth rate of 30% pa thereafter. 3. Hosting provider affiliate fees. While we can't recommend anyone, there is no reason why the network can't earn a referral fee. We will be aiming for top draw bandwidth, so none of that $5/ month hosting stuff. We're talking $15/month going up to $100/month for the very best hardware and bandwidth. How many nodes * 15% referral fees. This also gets you an idea of costs. 4. Sorry can't say just yet. Allow $100k to $150k per year back to the network, $30k in the first year. Costs 1. So, monthly hosting. $15/month, but as node competition picks-up and the blockchains increase in size, we'll have to think about allowing for $40/month, then by year 5, $100/month. You wouldn't scale up, though, if the income wasn't there. 2. Bookkeeping, accounting, tax. Allow $750 / year up to 10 nodes. Allow $1,000 for more than 10 nodes. 3. Escrow fees for monthly subscribers. 1% 4. Percentage sent to Bitcoin miners. Not sure yet. Let's start with 10% and aim for much higher proportion as node gross margin grows. ServiceNodes gross margins - lets say 50%? We'll have to work through that as the numbers get worked up in your Spread - sheet. Could be more, could be less. 5. Marketing contributions. Lots of people say businesses should aim for 10% of income. But we'll need to take a close look at that - more in the earlier years, less as the project gains traction. 6. Dev funding contributions. Let's park that for now. Thoughts?
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defunctec
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January 19, 2016, 12:28:41 PM |
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.... I'd need ideas/speculation on types of income streams and how much they could produce. How the 'business' [nodes] would be structured. Stuff like that thanks BTW, i stlll have the address that the 16000 spr are in SPrdeF1KU5CreLH2TYdnhNmZMAmoBbEynYDamn. hmm. I guess you're right. We need to do some work on the data market income potential. I have 0 knowledge about. If you could feed me numbers on potential income apart from coinbase reward I can start to play. I think the only way we can do this bit is to give away a few secrets... [1. The data market is the data market. People will be able to subscribe on a monthly basis and pull data out as and when, provided they remain subscribed. Lets say $300 / month per region and $1,000 / monthly globally?] #1. Ok, what kind of 'data' are we talking about? Transaction? Is it just bitcoin we offer data on or all coins? What exactly would a $1,000 subscription get you? {How many customers? That's the big question. How many banks are there; how many insurance firms; how many mobile phone retailers; etc.} We can only speculate with a conservative outlook. [80 national (in total) /20 global customers in the first year, and an annual growth rate of 100% thereafter? We can't go into why that number makes sense to me, just yet.] #2. How did you come to the conclusion of 80 national/ 20 global? Can you point to and existing example or explain where you get the figures from? I just need more clarity on this issue. 2. BI tools. We are aiming for affiliate / partner fees from people that buy BI tools via SPR. Let's allow $10,000 for the first year in affiliate fees, and then $30,000 for the next two years, with a growth rate of 30% pa thereafter. #3. Whats a BI tool? lol 3. Hosting provider affiliate fees. While we can't recommend anyone, there is no reason why the network can't earn a referral fee. #4. How would referrals work on the network? I can understand individual node owners taking fees, but how would the network? How would it propagate referrals exactly? We will be aiming for top draw bandwidth, so none of that $5/ month hosting stuff. We're talking $15/month going up to $100/month for the very best hardware and bandwidth. How many nodes * 15% referral fees. This also gets you an idea of costs. 4. Sorry can't say just yet. Allow $100k to $150k per year back to the network, $30k in the first year. Costs 1. So, monthly hosting. $15/month, but as node competition picks-up and the blockchains increase in size, we'll have to think about allowing for $40/month, then by year 5, $100/month. You wouldn't scale up, though, if the income wasn't there. 2. Bookkeeping, accounting, tax. Allow $750 / year up to 10 nodes. Allow $1,000 for more than 10 nodes. 3. Escrow fees for monthly subscribers. 1% 4. Percentage sent to Bitcoin miners. Not sure yet. Let's start with 10% and aim for much higher proportion as node gross margin grows. #5. I don't understand why we'd need to give anything to Bitcoin miners? ServiceNodes gross margins - lets say 50%? We'll have to work through that as the numbers get worked up in your Spread - sheet. Could be more, could be less. 5. Marketing contributions. Lots of people say businesses should aim for 10% of income. But we'll need to take a close look at that - more in the earlier years, less as the project gains traction. {6. Dev funding contributions. Let's park that for now.} 1%? Thoughts?
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coins101
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January 19, 2016, 12:59:29 PM |
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defunctec
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January 19, 2016, 02:26:46 PM |
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Ah cool.. So you embed BI somehow into your SN and it sorts through the data you receive?
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just2laff
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January 19, 2016, 03:33:03 PM |
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This is a good business plan, and seems to be getting better. I've invested some considerable amount into it. I cannot recommend however hosting anything with teamviewer as a method of controlling it. I had set up a vutr account with a windows OS, and got hacked for 56k spr (in august, when it was worth much less). This can be seen at the "johnpadalecki" account registered then. This has apparently happened recently to another member, through the same apparatus. Beware teamviewer. I am still using it, but using all different paswords on each computer. And a completely isolated email account.
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Propagandalf
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January 19, 2016, 03:52:12 PM |
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Servicenodes
I understand that when you place a certain amount of SPR as collateral, you get a SN seat (so long as you are not the weakest link and thereby "kicked" when someone outbids you). Do you lose any of this collateral in the event that you are outbidded? If not, then it's just to increase the amount and go again, right?
In theory, I guess you can put all of your SPR as collateral to secure a seat, but the drawback will be that you have no SPR left to run several more SNs, thus making it less lucrative. Am I right? Just trying to work out the mechanics here...
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georgem (OP)
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spreadcoin.info
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January 19, 2016, 03:56:50 PM |
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Servicenodes
I understand that when you place a certain amount of SPR as collateral, you get a SN seat (so long as you are not the weakest link and thereby "kicked" when someone outbids you). Do you lose any of this collateral in the event that you are outbidded? If not, then it's just to increase the amount and go again, right?
In theory, I guess you can put all of your SPR as collateral to secure a seat, but the drawback will be that you have no SPR left to run several more SNs, thus making it less lucrative. Am I right? Just trying to work out the mechanics here...
Yes, collaterals aren't "payments to someone" (that this someone might take away from you). No, they are basically "tied lookup addresses" that the network/protocol will constantly check to see if you match the criteria. Yes, there is a spread between less risk and more reward! It's up to you to find out what suits you best.
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coins101
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January 19, 2016, 04:16:11 PM |
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Servicenodes
I understand that when you place a certain amount of SPR as collateral, you get a SN seat (so long as you are not the weakest link and thereby "kicked" when someone outbids you). Do you lose any of this collateral in the event that you are outbidded? If not, then it's just to increase the amount and go again, right?
In theory, I guess you can put all of your SPR as collateral to secure a seat, but the drawback will be that you have no SPR left to run several more SNs, thus making it less lucrative. Am I right? Just trying to work out the mechanics here...
The main point about collateral is to prevent botnets and unwanted spies. The nice byproduct of this approach is that you lock-up coins that would otherwise be circulating around exchanges. This causes positive price pressures, which makes revenues for running servicesnodes and also mining with reduced coinbase rewards profitable. Having a sustainable revenue model means that the servicenode network is less prone to market fluctuations and so you shouldn't see mass dumping of coins if the price takes a turn for the worst. Why would you dump coins if you are still making a profit each month? So, you don't actually pay to join the servicenode network - not unless you buy a good seat and regular income from someone else already on the network and you are prepared to pay to jump into that seat.
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Propagandalf
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January 19, 2016, 04:21:48 PM |
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Servicenodes
I understand that when you place a certain amount of SPR as collateral, you get a SN seat (so long as you are not the weakest link and thereby "kicked" when someone outbids you). Do you lose any of this collateral in the event that you are outbidded? If not, then it's just to increase the amount and go again, right?
In theory, I guess you can put all of your SPR as collateral to secure a seat, but the drawback will be that you have no SPR left to run several more SNs, thus making it less lucrative. Am I right? Just trying to work out the mechanics here...
Yes, collaterals aren't "payments to someone" (that this someone might take away from you). No, they are basically "tied lookup addresses" that the network/protocol will constantly check to see if you match the criteria. Yes, there is a spread between less risk and more reward! It's up to you to find out what suits you best. Thanks for the answer. And just to be clear: When you say risk you mean simply for instance tying up too much SPR so you earn less (because you could have had multiple SNs), and not risk related to any other loss factors I should be aware of? Like if SN reputation, kick rate, stats or similar affect earnings negatively in the long run?
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stonehedge
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Decentralize Everything
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January 19, 2016, 04:25:21 PM |
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Servicenodes
I understand that when you place a certain amount of SPR as collateral, you get a SN seat (so long as you are not the weakest link and thereby "kicked" when someone outbids you). Do you lose any of this collateral in the event that you are outbidded? If not, then it's just to increase the amount and go again, right?
In theory, I guess you can put all of your SPR as collateral to secure a seat, but the drawback will be that you have no SPR left to run several more SNs, thus making it less lucrative. Am I right? Just trying to work out the mechanics here...
Yes, collaterals aren't "payments to someone" (that this someone might take away from you). No, they are basically "tied lookup addresses" that the network/protocol will constantly check to see if you match the criteria. Yes, there is a spread between less risk and more reward! It's up to you to find out what suits you best. Thanks for the answer. And just to be clear: When you say risk you mean simply for instance tying up too much SPR so you earn less (because you could have had multiple SNs), and not risk related to any other loss factors I should be aware of? Like if SN reputation, kick rate, stats or similar affect earnings negatively in the long run? There is no risk of losing your collateral running a servicenode. Usual caveats apply such as don't publish your private key
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georgem (OP)
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spreadcoin.info
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January 19, 2016, 04:27:26 PM |
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Thanks for the answer. And just to be clear: When you say risk you mean simply for instance tying up too much SPR so you earn less (because you could have had multiple SNs), and not risk related to any other loss factors I should be aware of? Like if SN reputation, kick rate, stats or similar affect earnings negatively in the long run?
Yes, the only thing that concerns you as a servicenode operator is: can you claim the "periodical" reward or not?That's literally the only "financial" risk you have: that you might be running a servicenode for a period without getting payed for it (because you were kicked, or have a very low score, or something else is broken/invalid) Next to this financial risk there are ofcourse other risks, like your server getting hacked, or your bandwidth getting throttled down because you have a cheap VPS, etc...
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coins101
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January 19, 2016, 04:35:52 PM |
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InstantX is a pretty good tool. Hey@ geoegem, this is camosoul, like for real:
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georgem (OP)
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January 19, 2016, 04:38:47 PM |
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Thanks for the answer. And just to be clear: When you say risk you mean simply for instance tying up too much SPR so you earn less (because you could have had multiple SNs), and not risk related to any other loss factors I should be aware of? Like if SN reputation, kick rate, stats or similar affect earnings negatively in the long run?
Well, yes, to answer your specific question more directly: Yes, you might miss out on reward if you have too much SPR in an address. But then again, it's not just about splitting large sums into smaller sums. It's also about successfully operating multiple servicenodes, which isn't childsplay. So, I don't look at it as a risk, but rather a question of reward: A person that is technically capable of running multiple well-permorming servicenodes should have the possibility to milk the reward multiple times.BUT: there is a continuous spread of how well he can "thin out" his collateral and spread it over his servicenodes while maintaining a strong claim on each seat.
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