USB-S
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November 25, 2015, 06:44:12 PM |
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if it was done (the halving) every year, right now miners would be fucked basically
So how does it change the things now, before the next halving? If the halving weren't as rare as it is, would the miners have already been fucked by now? If they would (which seems to be your point), I see no reason why they won't be ruined by this halving... What goes around comes about it change the thing because they had time to improve the efficiency, now they have a better efficiency and can sustain the halving even with a <<<$100 price, if the halving was every years they would still be with the efficiency of 2011.... A better efficiency is fully accommodated over time by the rising difficulty, so we are effectively time-invariant in the long run (efficiency vs difficulty), i.e. the halving interval is irrelevant if we still hit the efficiency wall before the halving. In other words, your assumption would hold true only if (and for as long as) the efficiency outpaces the difficulty. Previously, this condition had been satisfied by the new more efficient equipment hitting the market on a pretty regular basis... But now we seem to be well past that point What are you talking about? New chips hit the market just this summer. Give them some time if you already want new chips. However current chips are pretty effective at around 0.25 J/GH If we were to cancel the halving, can we remove the 21mil hard cap as well?
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Amph
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November 25, 2015, 06:58:10 PM |
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if it was done (the halving) every year, right now miners would be fucked basically
So how does it change the things now, before the next halving? If the halving weren't as rare as it is, would the miners have already been fucked by now? If they would (which seems to be your point), I see no reason why they won't be ruined by this halving... What goes around comes about it change the thing because they had time to improve the efficiency, now they have a better efficiency and can sustain the halving even with a <<<$100 price, if the halving was every years they would still be with the efficiency of 2011.... A better efficiency is fully accommodated over time by the rising difficulty, so we are effectively time-invariant in the long run (efficiency vs difficulty), i.e. the halving interval is irrelevant if we still hit the efficiency wall before the halving. In other words, your assumption would hold true only if (and for as long as) the efficiency outpaces the difficulty. Previously, this condition had been satisfied by the new more efficient equipment hitting the market on a pretty regular basis... But now we seem to be well past that point difficulty will not increase if the price do not increase, so no one can not rely on difficulty and dismiss the impact of the halving, for the efficiency satoshi predicted that the price would be increased slowly not in few years, this was another reason for the halving
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deisik (OP)
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November 25, 2015, 07:00:47 PM |
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A better efficiency is fully accommodated over time by the rising difficulty, so we are effectively time-invariant in the long run (efficiency vs difficulty), i.e. the halving interval is irrelevant if we still hit the efficiency wall before the halving. In other words, your assumption would hold true only if (and for as long as) the efficiency outpaces the difficulty. Previously, this condition had been satisfied by the new more efficient equipment hitting the market on a pretty regular basis...
But now we seem to be well past that point
What are you talking about? New chips hit the market just this summer. Give them some time if you already want new chips. However current chips are pretty effective at around 0.25 J/GH Will these new chips be cost effective at 12.5 BTC reward per block (given the price and difficulty we have today)?
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deisik (OP)
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November 25, 2015, 07:03:14 PM |
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difficulty will not increase if the price do not increase, so no one can not rely on difficulty and dismiss the impact of the halving, for the efficiency
This essentially means that the current level of efficiency should be doubled at halving, to keep things as they were/would be before the halving... Are the new chips twice as efficient?
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Amph
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November 25, 2015, 07:08:46 PM |
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aside from this i believe that the primarily reason for the halving is to delay as long as possible the fee era, and to permit to have a very valuable fees for the miners too mine, otherwise if we were to mine all the supply very quickly and enter the fee era prematurely
miners would not have profit anymore and they would leave the game, leaving the network unsecure
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deisik (OP)
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November 25, 2015, 07:09:55 PM |
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If we were to cancel the halving, can we remove the 21mil hard cap as well?
The latter follows from the former
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n691309
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November 25, 2015, 07:20:52 PM |
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If we were to cancel the halving, can we remove the 21mil hard cap as well?
The latter follows from the former If the supply is unlimited then how much would cost a bitcoin? it is better to have restriction and a limit on supply as the price should be increased year by year until there are a small amount in market.
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lissandra
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November 25, 2015, 07:22:16 PM |
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If we were to cancel the halving, can we remove the 21mil hard cap as well?
The latter follows from the former i thought the hard 21 mill cap is to save bitcoin in its value. Like how we aint a printing press, like the feds do no?
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Amph
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November 25, 2015, 07:27:46 PM |
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i was thinking that the halving would have been useless if bitcoin had risen enormously in value in the past and within the first 3-5 years but even satoshi didn't believe in it to skyrocket so fast Are the new chips twice as efficient?
yes they are, s7 is x2 more efficient than the s5 antminer
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GannickusX
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November 25, 2015, 08:26:01 PM |
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if it was done (the halving) every year, right now miners would be fucked basically
So how does it change the things now, before the next halving? If the halving weren't as rare as it is, would the miners have already been fucked by now? If they would (which seems to be your point), I see no reason why they won't be ruined by this halving... What goes around comes about it change the thing because they had time to improve the efficiency, now they have a better efficiency and can sustain the halving even with a <<<$100 price, if the halving was every years they would still be with the efficiency of 2011.... A better efficiency is fully accommodated over time by the rising difficulty, so we are effectively time-invariant in the long run (efficiency vs difficulty), i.e. the halving interval is irrelevant if we still hit the efficiency wall before the halving. In other words, your assumption would hold true only if (and for as long as) the efficiency outpaces the difficulty. Previously, this condition had been satisfied by the new more efficient equipment hitting the market on a pretty regular basis... But now we seem to be well past that point What are you talking about? New chips hit the market just this summer. Give them some time if you already want new chips. However current chips are pretty effective at around 0.25 J/GH If we were to cancel the halving, can we remove the 21mil hard cap as well? How would we cancel the halving exactly? I thought that was something built in the system itself and couldn't be stopped, pretty much in all coins. Last one that got halved was litecoin and the price wasn't really affected at all by it. I Hardly doubt there is a way to remove the 21mil cap.
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Amph
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November 25, 2015, 08:35:44 PM |
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if it was done (the halving) every year, right now miners would be fucked basically
So how does it change the things now, before the next halving? If the halving weren't as rare as it is, would the miners have already been fucked by now? If they would (which seems to be your point), I see no reason why they won't be ruined by this halving... What goes around comes about it change the thing because they had time to improve the efficiency, now they have a better efficiency and can sustain the halving even with a <<<$100 price, if the halving was every years they would still be with the efficiency of 2011.... A better efficiency is fully accommodated over time by the rising difficulty, so we are effectively time-invariant in the long run (efficiency vs difficulty), i.e. the halving interval is irrelevant if we still hit the efficiency wall before the halving. In other words, your assumption would hold true only if (and for as long as) the efficiency outpaces the difficulty. Previously, this condition had been satisfied by the new more efficient equipment hitting the market on a pretty regular basis... But now we seem to be well past that point What are you talking about? New chips hit the market just this summer. Give them some time if you already want new chips. However current chips are pretty effective at around 0.25 J/GH If we were to cancel the halving, can we remove the 21mil hard cap as well? How would we cancel the halving exactly? I thought that was something built in the system itself and couldn't be stopped, pretty much in all coins. Last one that got halved was litecoin and the price wasn't really affected at all by it. I Hardly doubt there is a way to remove the 21mil cap. miners consensus above a certain % with the help of other people can potentially hard fork bitcoin and cancel the halving it's all about consensus + hard fork, after all many alt coin are hard fork of bitcoin...
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deisik (OP)
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November 25, 2015, 09:06:07 PM Last edit: November 25, 2015, 09:37:21 PM by deisik |
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i was thinking that the halving would have been useless if bitcoin had risen enormously in value in the past and within the first 3-5 years but even satoshi didn't believe in it to skyrocket so fast Are the new chips twice as efficient?
yes they are, s7 is x2 more efficient than the s5 antminer The quick search on Google reveals that "the S5+ antminer offers nearly 3,000 more GH/s than the announced S7". How's that? Besides, the S5 uses 60 chips per miner while the S7 uses 162, so is this new miner in fact more efficient? Efficiency is not only about power consumption (operating costs), you should also take into account capital expenditures. In this way, if the new miner consumes half but costs twice as much (or even the same if it has the same hashrate), then you would still be less profitable at 12.5 BTC with it than with the old miner at 25 BTC per block per same price... That's why Bitcoin halving may have devastating effects on its future (too many factors need to be "upgraded")
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deisik (OP)
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November 25, 2015, 09:12:56 PM |
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If we were to cancel the halving, can we remove the 21mil hard cap as well?
The latter follows from the former If the supply is unlimited then how much would cost a bitcoin? it is better to have restriction and a limit on supply as the price should be increased year by year until there are a small amount in market. I have created another topic which discusses this issue in particular. Short version, the higher price (due to limited supply) turns Bitcoin into a Ponzi scheme, which would kill it eventually...
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anyzhugo789
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November 26, 2015, 02:11:10 AM |
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What?
Who has the most power over Bitcoin? Right, these are mining pools. Who is most interested in preserving the current block reward? The same mining pools... Who gives a fuck what the pools do, it's what the miners do. Mining pools act on behalf of the miners. Besides, do you understand that the miners will be the first to welcome the cancellation of halving?
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btckold24
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★Bitvest.io★ Play Plinko or Invest!
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November 26, 2015, 06:18:24 AM |
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isnt it built into the system to halve? also who is this "they" that would be able to make a decision like that
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Amph
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November 26, 2015, 07:38:16 AM |
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i was thinking that the halving would have been useless if bitcoin had risen enormously in value in the past and within the first 3-5 years but even satoshi didn't believe in it to skyrocket so fast Are the new chips twice as efficient?
yes they are, s7 is x2 more efficient than the s5 antminer The quick search on Google reveals that "the S5+ antminer offers nearly 3,000 more GH/s than the announced S7". How's that? Besides, the S5 uses 60 chips per miner while the S7 uses 162, so is this new miner in fact more efficient? Efficiency is not only about power consumption (operating costs), you should also take into account capital expenditures. In this way, if the new miner consumes half but costs twice as much (or even the same if it has the same hashrate), then you would still be less profitable at 12.5 BTC with it than with the old miner at 25 BTC per block per same price... That's why Bitcoin halving may have devastating effects on its future (too many factors need to be "upgraded") i was talking about the old s5, the s5+ was released with the s7 basically, but it's still not efficient liek the s7, it's a bulky version of the s5 with a slightly more better efficiency
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deisik (OP)
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November 26, 2015, 08:10:21 PM |
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The quick search on Google reveals that "the S5+ antminer offers nearly 3,000 more GH/s than the announced S7". How's that? Besides, the S5 uses 60 chips per miner while the S7 uses 162, so is this new miner in fact more efficient? Efficiency is not only about power consumption (operating costs), you should also take into account capital expenditures. In this way, if the new miner consumes half but costs twice as much (or even the same if it has the same hashrate), then you would still be less profitable at 12.5 BTC with it than with the old miner at 25 BTC per block per same price...
That's why Bitcoin halving may have devastating effects on its future (too many factors need to be "upgraded")
i was talking about the old s5, the s5+ was released with the s7 basically, but it's still not efficient liek the s7, it's a bulky version of the s5 with a slightly more better efficiency It seems that your definition of efficiency is heavily lopsided. My understanding of efficiency is entirely economic, i.e. I don't care about power consumption and hashrates as such. All I care is the balance of costs and revenues. In other words, the miner that incurs less cost and brings in more revenue is more efficient (i.e. does more with less) than the one that does the opposite... That's what all technical parameters ultimately boil down to
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Amph
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November 27, 2015, 07:53:52 AM |
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The quick search on Google reveals that "the S5+ antminer offers nearly 3,000 more GH/s than the announced S7". How's that? Besides, the S5 uses 60 chips per miner while the S7 uses 162, so is this new miner in fact more efficient? Efficiency is not only about power consumption (operating costs), you should also take into account capital expenditures. In this way, if the new miner consumes half but costs twice as much (or even the same if it has the same hashrate), then you would still be less profitable at 12.5 BTC with it than with the old miner at 25 BTC per block per same price...
That's why Bitcoin halving may have devastating effects on its future (too many factors need to be "upgraded")
i was talking about the old s5, the s5+ was released with the s7 basically, but it's still not efficient liek the s7, it's a bulky version of the s5 with a slightly more better efficiency It seems that your definition of efficiency is heavily lopsided. My understanding of efficiency is entirely economic, i.e. I don't care about power consumption and hashrates as such. All I care is the balance of costs and revenues. In other words, the miner that incurs less cost and brings in more revenue is more efficient (i.e. does more with less) than the one that does the opposite... That's what all technical parameters ultimately boil down to my definition is different, talking about the initial investment as efficiency is a no-sense, the efficiency is only related to consumption, and the s7 consume half of the s5, so x2 efficiency the fact that it cost more, does not mean anything, you can always sell it for the same value even after many months, guaranteed
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deisik (OP)
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November 27, 2015, 08:27:57 AM Last edit: November 27, 2015, 08:42:59 AM by deisik |
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It seems that your definition of efficiency is heavily lopsided. My understanding of efficiency is entirely economic, i.e. I don't care about power consumption and hashrates as such. All I care is the balance of costs and revenues. In other words, the miner that incurs less cost and brings in more revenue is more efficient (i.e. does more with less) than the one that does the opposite...
That's what all technical parameters ultimately boil down to
my definition is different, talking about the initial investment as efficiency is a no-sense, the efficiency is only related to consumption, and the s7 consume half of the s5, so x2 efficiency The problem is it doesn't in the least guarantee that with an s7 you will profit twice as much as with an s5 given only its half as much power consumption. Initial investment (aka capital expenditure) as a part of fixed costs defines your break-even point. You still have to shell out on the equipment first, whether you love it or not. Your personal opinion (lol) that you can sell your miner is not related to this, and I highly doubt that you will get for it the same price which you bought it at after a few months of operation (and more so before the halving)... Even if you personally will be lucky to sell your device at its original price tag
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deisik (OP)
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November 27, 2015, 08:47:05 AM Last edit: November 27, 2015, 09:21:03 AM by deisik |
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the fact that it cost more, does not mean anything, you can always sell it for the same value even after many months, guaranteed
If the equipment still brings in cash, it makes no sense economically to sell it (prior to break-even at least). Otherwise, you would be better off by not buying it in the first place (all other things being equal). But if it stops bringing in enough revenue at some point (negative cash flow), you won't be able to profitably sell it... If only out of pure luck to some goof, lol
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