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Author Topic: Whitelist Requests (Want out of here?)  (Read 474731 times)
brewcrew
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March 13, 2012, 02:37:49 AM
 #1901

all i am trying to do is buy some bitcoins for moneypak, and am willing to go first. any chance i'm getting whitelisted?
You get merit points when someone likes your post enough to give you some. And for every 2 merit points you receive, you can send 1 merit point to someone else!
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1714178475
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Reply with quote  #2

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s0beit
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March 13, 2012, 04:09:34 PM
 #1902

I want to offer programming services on the board, and possibly reply to the call for programmers by the administrators. (I am proficient in PHP/SQL/Javascript)

I only have about 2 hours to go, but since my posting quota hasn't got me out of the Newbie group yet, if nothing else, this post will allow me to advance.
Anastasios
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March 14, 2012, 03:40:26 AM
Last edit: March 14, 2012, 12:36:50 PM by Anastasios
 #1903

Hello, my name is Anastasios. I am a bitcoin enthusiast since early 2011, and got interested in bitcoin mainly because of its decentralized nature. I got myself several rigs (4) to show my appreciation of the opportunity of partaking in bitcoin mining, even though it didnt prove to be very profitable.

The main reason I am going to use the forums for now is to review some bitcoin services, and possibly discuss bitcoin mining and speculation. I have had some very good experiences with many BTC accepting services which deserve mentioning, and I believe there is a lot of untapped potential within them and the BTC economy as a whole.

edit: sp

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=994411.0 My simple price and metrics analysis
arabianights
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March 14, 2012, 03:36:31 PM
 #1904

I still seem to be restricted despite having more than 5 posts and having been a member for a few days. What's up with that?

I only discovered this because I was wanting to add a helpful post in the spculation forum as well...
ARapalo
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March 15, 2012, 11:29:13 PM
 #1905

Ah a whitelist reqest page, how useful. Can I please request to get out of this section? I've been lurking on this forum for about a month and wanted to post so I registered. No idea that once you register, it only limits you to the "newbie" section.

Thanks admins.
Rjb82
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March 16, 2012, 03:08:54 AM
 #1906

Hi,

I've been reading and getting info about BTC and the related Alt-currencies from this forum since Sept. 2011.

I've started to do small amounts of business here, and would like permission to post and reply on other boards.

Thanks for your consideration.
BangCoins
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March 17, 2012, 04:12:42 AM
 #1907

I would like to request to get out of the newbie forum. I have another account on these forums that meets the qualifications to leave, but this account is strictly for business.
mystery2048
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March 17, 2012, 09:54:04 AM
 #1908

can i be whitelisted please?

Important: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=92424.0;all

Donations: 1HWMQv2VYviAgpy6NWNvVg9JhKm4zcMGS5
buybtc
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March 17, 2012, 05:44:03 PM
 #1909

Going to offer a way to buy bitcoins for credit card so if I could be white listed be very helpful thank you!
beaups
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March 17, 2012, 07:58:43 PM
 #1910

Requesting whitelist please.
Prospect1
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March 17, 2012, 11:43:43 PM
 #1911

Please unlock the newbie status.  I have been trying to get out of the newbie phase for over 2 days.   I am the owner of a 2 apparel brands (im the manufacturer)   I have some legitimate questions to get answered pertaining to accepting BTC for my sites and through affiliates carrying my brands.   thanks for you consideration
RulingCzar
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March 18, 2012, 07:27:35 PM
 #1912

I would like to be whitelisted so I can share my experience with others in regards to an exchange service. Thank you!
JZ999
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March 18, 2012, 09:33:16 PM
 #1913

Hello, I would like to be whitelisted. I will help support the bitcoin economy by buying coins with my hard earned money  Grin
SCato
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March 19, 2012, 04:19:24 PM
 #1914

I just joined, asking to be whitelisted. Im pretty sure i just got scammed bad with Get-BitCoin.com

Has been 16 days and I still dont have my coins and they keep giving me the run around.

trying to post in this review thread: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=34812.0
wiretapped
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March 20, 2012, 02:44:05 AM
 #1915

I joined this forum to discuss the mystery of the empty-block miner who presently appears to have ~15% of the hash power. I would like to contribute to the discussion at https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=67634 starting with the posts I made in the newbie section at https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=69340

Thanks.
ike989
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March 21, 2012, 01:42:34 PM
 #1916

I request being whitelisted because of a recent transaction. While searching the forums, I can across the thread of Techshare. He offers Steam games or TF2 items for bitcoins. We completed a transaction yesterday, which can be verified by the rep posts left on his steam profile and my steam profile. I would now like to leave the appropriate feedback in his sales thread and need to be whitelisted to do this.

Thank you
eightbitbandit
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March 21, 2012, 09:44:02 PM
 #1917

I have been playing around with p2pool, and I have scripted what I believe to be a fairly robust init script for Red Hat based systems. I'd like to post it in the thread for other members to use. You can find my script here.
darkice
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March 22, 2012, 12:59:07 AM
 #1918

4.5 GH/s on p2pool

dedicated setup

my own datacenter Smiley

Bsc in comp sci Smiley

get me out of here
koalana
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March 22, 2012, 04:48:11 AM
 #1919

um,

now here is a way to some glory

Amazon EC2 and other cloud services are expanding the market for high-performance computing. Without access to a national lab or a supercomputer in your own data center, cloud computing lets businesses spin up temporary clusters at will and stop paying for them as soon as the computing needs are met.

A vendor called Cycle Computing is on a mission to demonstrate the potential of Amazon’s cloud by building increasingly large clusters on the Elastic Compute Cloud. Even with Amazon, building a cluster takes some work, but Cycle combines several technologies to ease the process and recently used them to create a 30,000-core cluster running CentOS Linux.

The cluster, announced publicly this week, was created for an unnamed “Top 5 Pharma” customer, and ran for about seven hours at the end of July at a peak cost of $1,279 per hour, including the fees to Amazon and Cycle Computing. The details are impressive: 3,809 compute instances, each with eight cores and 7GB of RAM, for a total of 30,472 cores, 26.7TB of RAM and 2PB (petabytes) of disk space. Security was ensured with HTTPS, SSH and 256-bit AES encryption, and the cluster ran across data centers in three Amazon regions in the United States and Europe. The cluster was dubbed “Nekomata.”

Spreading the cluster across multiple continents was done partly for disaster recovery purposes, and also to guarantee that 30,000 cores could be provisioned. “We thought it would improve our probability of success if we spread it out,” Cycle Computing’s Dave Powers, manager of product engineering, told Ars. “Nobody really knows how many instances you can get at any one time from any one [Amazon] region.”

Amazon offers its own special cluster compute instances, at a higher cost than regular-sized virtual machines. These cluster instances provide 10 Gigabit Ethernet networking along with greater CPU and memory, but they weren’t necessary to build the Cycle Computing cluster.

The pharmaceutical company’s job, related to molecular modeling, was “embarrassingly parallel” so a fast interconnect wasn’t crucial. To further reduce costs, Cycle took advantage of Amazon’s low-price “spot instances.” To manage the cluster, Cycle Computing used its own management software as well as the Condor High-Throughput Computing software and Chef, an open source systems integration framework.

Cycle demonstrated the power of the Amazon cloud earlier this year with a 10,000-core cluster built for a smaller pharma firm called Genentech. Now, 10,000 cores is a relatively easy task, says Powers. “We think we’ve mastered the small-scale environments,” he said. 30,000 cores isn’t the end game, either. Going forward, Cycle plans bigger, more complicated clusters, perhaps ones that will require Amazon’s special cluster compute instances.

The 30,000-core cluster may or may not be the biggest one run on EC2. Amazon isn’t saying.

“I can’t share specific customer details, but can tell you that we do have businesses of all sizes running large-scale, high-performance computing workloads on AWS [Amazon Web Services], including distributed clusters like the Cycle Computing 30,000 core cluster to tightly-coupled clusters often used for science and engineering applications such as computational fluid dynamics and molecular dynamics simulation,” an Amazon spokesperson told Ars.

Amazon itself actually built a supercomputer on its own cloud that made it onto the list of the world’s Top 500 supercomputers. With 7,000 cores, the Amazon cluster ranked number 232 in the world last November with speeds of 41.82 teraflops, falling to number 451 in June of this year. So far, Cycle Computing hasn’t run the Linpack benchmark to determine the speed of its clusters relative to Top 500 sites.

But Cycle’s work is impressive no matter how you measure it. The job performed for the unnamed pharma company “would take well over a week for them to run internally,” Powers says. In the end, the cluster performed the equivalent of 10.9 “compute years of work.”

The task of managing such large cloud-based clusters forced Cycle to step up its own game, with a new plug-in for Chef the company calls Grill.

“There is no way that any mere human could keep track of all of the moving parts on a cluster of this scale,” Cycle wrote in a blog post. “At Cycle, we’ve always been fans of extreme IT automation, but we needed to take this to the next level in order to monitor and manage every instance, volume, daemon, job, and so on in order for Nekomata to be an efficient 30,000 core tool instead of a big shiny on-demand paperweight.”

But problems did arise during the 30,000-core run.

“You can be sure that when you run at massive scale, you are bound to run into some unexpected gotchas,” Cycle notes. “In our case, one of the gotchas included such things as running out of file descriptors on the license server. In hindsight, we should have anticipated this would be an issue, but we didn’t find that in our prelaunch testing, because we didn’t test at full scale. We were able to quickly recover from this bump and keep moving along with the workload with minimal impact. The license server was able to keep up very nicely with this workload once we increased the number of file descriptors.”

Cycle also hit a speed bump related to volume and byte limits on Amazon’s Elastic Block Store volumes. But the company is already planning bigger and better things.

“We already have our next use-case identified and will be turning up the scale a bit more with the next run,” the company says. But ultimately, “it’s not about core counts or terabytes of RAM or petabytes of data. Rather, it’s about how we are helping to transform how science is done.”
ocguy
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March 22, 2012, 06:01:00 PM
 #1920

I would love to be out of this cage.
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