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Author Topic: Who is quitting mining due to block halving?  (Read 4944 times)
crazyates
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December 02, 2012, 05:09:16 AM
 #41

at the end of the day btc will be the determinator for mining profitability unless some other alt chain grows substantially in its influence.
And explain to me why we need an alt-coin? What's wrong with just simply mining BTC and be happy with that?

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Transactions must be included in a block to be properly completed. When you send a transaction, it is broadcast to miners. Miners can then optionally include it in their next blocks. Miners will be more inclined to include your transaction if it has a higher transaction fee.
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AngelusWebDesign
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December 02, 2012, 05:45:14 AM
 #42

at the end of the day btc will be the determinator for mining profitability unless some other alt chain grows substantially in its influence.
And explain to me why we need an alt-coin? What's wrong with just simply mining BTC and be happy with that?

Alt coin chains are so stupid.

They are just a temporary bit of variety for miners, and they provide a short-lived bonus to the first miners to point their resources there.

But the fact is that even Bitcoin is not well-established with places to spend them, etc. so what chance does LiteCoin, SolidCoin, ButtCoin, etc. have of becoming a real currency, rather than a huge, unapologetic flash-in-the-pan?

Talk about a currency that exists solely for speculation , or a pyramid scheme -- any of the "alternate" blockchains fit this description.

At least Bitcoin has some measure of popularity and stability, with a bit of an infrastructure.
enquirer
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December 02, 2012, 05:12:04 PM
 #43

at the end of the day btc will be the determinator for mining profitability unless some other alt chain grows substantially in its influence.
And explain to me why we need an alt-coin? What's wrong with just simply mining BTC and be happy with that?

Because half of all bitcoins have been already mined by early adopters. Now alt chain is a new opportunity to be an early adopter.
mentalove
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December 04, 2012, 01:03:26 AM
 #44

over 3/4 of the value of the coins i mine goes back into electricity. i will keep it going until my ASIC comes Cheesy
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December 05, 2012, 12:30:49 AM
 #45

just a 5970 and yep, i shut it down. hope bfl ships soon!
muyuu
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December 05, 2012, 02:39:45 PM
 #46

LTC just died in the arse as a bunch of GPU miners jumped on board for a bit and pushed difficulty beyond profitability. I did warn them that the BTC halving would hurt LTC but they saw more people mining as a good thing. The LTC fanboys thought that more people mining would somehow magically drive LTC prices up when there is no such mechanism.


This was very predictable (from September):

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=108528.msg1200541#msg1200541
you and 10,000 other motherfuckers, what do you think is going to happen to litecoin difficulty?   Roll Eyes
I am more interested in what will happen to LTC price...any predictions ?

(just bought an additionally 7970)

What do you expect? 10K odd GPU mofos selling every LTC they mine for BTC. That's a downward pressure. If a number of them decide to hoard, that's an upward pressure. But as a general rule, short-term minded miners who would be expected to flock to LTC are likely to bring the price down. LTC are simply not traded almost anywhere and they don't offer any big advantages over BTC. Basically the core of LTC who just wanted a GPU free environment will see that goal definitively destroyed.

GPU have very little future as mining equipment. The whole project would be pointless now with a GPU-dominated ecosystem and no single meaningful advantage over the coin that has all the traction - except for those with large quantities of LTC.

GPG ID: 7294199D - OTC ID: muyuu (470F97EB7294199D)
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bitcoindaddy
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December 05, 2012, 02:47:53 PM
 #47

I had everything shutdown but turned one rig back on when I did the math. It's barely worth it though to keep running.
AngelusWebDesign
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December 05, 2012, 05:09:01 PM
 #48

LTC just died in the arse as a bunch of GPU miners jumped on board for a bit and pushed difficulty beyond profitability. I did warn them that the BTC halving would hurt LTC but they saw more people mining as a good thing. The LTC fanboys thought that more people mining would somehow magically drive LTC prices up when there is no such mechanism.


This was very predictable (from September):

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=108528.msg1200541#msg1200541
you and 10,000 other motherfuckers, what do you think is going to happen to litecoin difficulty?   Roll Eyes
I am more interested in what will happen to LTC price...any predictions ?

(just bought an additionally 7970)

What do you expect? 10K odd GPU mofos selling every LTC they mine for BTC. That's a downward pressure. If a number of them decide to hoard, that's an upward pressure. But as a general rule, short-term minded miners who would be expected to flock to LTC are likely to bring the price down. LTC are simply not traded almost anywhere and they don't offer any big advantages over BTC. Basically the core of LTC who just wanted a GPU free environment will see that goal definitively destroyed.

GPU have very little future as mining equipment. The whole project would be pointless now with a GPU-dominated ecosystem and no single meaningful advantage over the coin that has all the traction - except for those with large quantities of LTC.

Anyone could have predicted the demise of LTC -- it's just the latest "me too" blockchain that has NO advantages over Bitcoin. At least not when all advantages/disadvantages are totaled up and weighed.

Bitcoin has an order of magnitude more traction, acceptance, infrastructure than all those alt-blockchains put together.

I'm sure LTC won't be the last, either.
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