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Author Topic: Crowd funded ASIC miner device  (Read 4848 times)
bitfreak91 (OP)
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March 31, 2013, 11:24:07 PM
 #1

   I'm starting a new topic on this (old) theme to ask you guys if you think you see the possibility of starting a crowd funded ASIC miner project.
   My proposal is to start is for me to startup new company funded by you, the people interested in buying such a device. The things can be arranged legally so that I would not be able to access the funds (or be able to access them and risking extortion charges) of this company without your permission (and this could be done with a voting system by signing messages from a bitcoin address). The profit that I get if the device will be a success can be proportional to some variables like: the price of the final product, delivery time, performance, power efficiency etc.
   About myself: I have electronics background. I hold now an engineer position where I develop HDL code and design PCBs. I discovered the bitcoin three months ago and started to make my own FPGA mining rig with some FPGAs that I had at home, so the algorithm it is well known by me. The project was a success: 20GHash/s and 1,2kW consumption.
   So, anybody interested? Opinions?
   
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March 31, 2013, 11:27:58 PM
 #2

I think its a bit late trying to develop an asic from the start. But if you want to try you first would need to provide data to ensure youre a real person and so on. Otherwise people wont invest into an anonymous user with 8 posts on the forum.

Please ALWAYS contact me through bitcointalk pm before sending someone coins.
bitfreak91 (OP)
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March 31, 2013, 11:42:51 PM
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I think its a bit late trying to develop an asic from the start. But if you want to try you first would need to provide data to ensure youre a real person and so on. Otherwise people wont invest into an anonymous user with 8 posts on the forum.

It is impossible to not reveal my identity and do the things as I proposed. For the moment we are just talking if it is possible my proposal.
The future is very uncertain so I don't know if it is too late, that's up to you. I estimate that 9 months to one year is needed to manufacture such a device. If by that time some ASIC miner "providers" don't deliver then it's a good idea to do this project.
tbd
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April 01, 2013, 12:42:37 AM
 #4

Leaving out building the miner, what do you think of developing the ASIC and selling the chips?  Should be faster time to market, and relatively straightforward if you've already developed your own SHA256 core.
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April 01, 2013, 01:51:37 AM
 #5

   I'm starting a new topic on this (old) theme to ask you guys if you think you see the possibility of starting a crowd funded ASIC miner project.
   My proposal is to start is for me to startup new company funded by you, the people interested in buying such a device. The things can be arranged legally so that I would not be able to access the funds (or be able to access them and risking extortion charges) of this company without your permission (and this could be done with a voting system by signing messages from a bitcoin address). The profit that I get if the device will be a success can be proportional to some variables like: the price of the final product, delivery time, performance, power efficiency etc.
   About myself: I have electronics background. I hold now an engineer position where I develop HDL code and design PCBs. I discovered the bitcoin three months ago and started to make my own FPGA mining rig with some FPGAs that I had at home, so the algorithm it is well known by me. The project was a success: 20GHash/s and 1,2kW consumption.
   So, anybody interested? Opinions?
   

With as many preorders failing to ship and other issues, I don't think any other company is ever going to be able to take preorders or crowd funding. I think, as a community, we've been burned enough times.

For a serious suggestion, start this company and go as far as you can go without taking anyone else's money. If you show that you've put in your own money and time, people will be much more willing to buy-in in the future. I suggest you get some designs going, get a quote from someone (and release the details, such as the company, price and delivery schedule). After you've done all this and have mountains of work to show, then you can come back and ask for funding. In the meantime, on tribute back to the forums and community by releasing details about your FPGAs and mining operations. If we can't trust you to share info like this, what makes you think we'll trust you with our money?
bitfreak91 (OP)
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April 01, 2013, 02:29:22 AM
 #6

@tbd: really I optimized the existing open source code to be able to squeeze two fully unrolled SHA256d cores in one big FPGA. About the ASIC: the chip is the expensive and the most time consuming part of the project and as I propose that the public fund the project I think is miners what they want and not chips.

@witherworth: there is no company. With me everything must start from zero as that is exactly what I have in terms of money. I know that the community lost money and hopes as many failed to keep their promises but I cannot do anything without your financial support. And also any technical support will be welcomed.

Here is one of the two rigs: under each heatsink there is one Virtex 6. The green PCB next to each heatsink is a power supply with 25A@1V for the FPGA core. One level below the top you can see a Digilent Nexys3 board. That board acts as a remote (over TCP) multiple serial port. Hope you enjoy.
http://i47.tinypic.com/2rfubf4.jpg
jubalix
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April 01, 2013, 02:33:50 AM
 #7

   I'm starting a new topic on this (old) theme to ask you guys if you think you see the possibility of starting a crowd funded ASIC miner project.
   My proposal is to start is for me to startup new company funded by you, the people interested in buying such a device. The things can be arranged legally so that I would not be able to access the funds (or be able to access them and risking extortion charges) of this company without your permission (and this could be done with a voting system by signing messages from a bitcoin address). The profit that I get if the device will be a success can be proportional to some variables like: the price of the final product, delivery time, performance, power efficiency etc.
   About myself: I have electronics background. I hold now an engineer position where I develop HDL code and design PCBs. I discovered the bitcoin three months ago and started to make my own FPGA mining rig with some FPGAs that I had at home, so the algorithm it is well known by me. The project was a success: 20GHash/s and 1,2kW consumption.
   So, anybody interested? Opinions?
   

If you could make a FPGA LTC miner now that would be something I may invest in

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bitfreak91 (OP)
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April 01, 2013, 02:39:59 AM
 #8

jubalix: you wouldn't. I realised that the FPGAs that I have can give 150-200 kHash/s for LTC and that is a 3000$ FPGA.
tbd
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April 01, 2013, 03:43:06 AM
 #9

Ultimately, yes, people would like devices and not chips.  However, there have been some challenges and many apparent scams of companies promising to deliver said devices, so the community is understandably wary.  I think getting funding would be difficult.

Another option would be to get funding from a smaller number of investors/partners for the chip development.  There's clearly a demand for chips, both for a small ASIC device (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=161715.0) and others interested in bulk purchases (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=162613.0, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=159257.0).  You can consider me part of this group.
bitfreak91 (OP)
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April 01, 2013, 11:28:34 AM
 #10

Ultimately, yes, people would like devices and not chips.  However, there have been some challenges and many apparent scams of companies promising to deliver said devices, so the community is understandably wary.  I think getting funding would be difficult.

Another option would be to get funding from a smaller number of investors/partners for the chip development.  There's clearly a demand for chips, both for a small ASIC device (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=161715.0) and others interested in bulk purchases (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=162613.0, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=159257.0).  You can consider me part of this group.

I see people are desperate to buy these chips/miners these days. It's because we are in the days where difficulty is relatively low. As I proposed there is one year needed for this project to have a consumer device and by that time difficulty will be very high. Unlike ASIC-based miner manufacturers who forget to mention that difficulty goes very high when a lot of ASIC miners enter the bitcoin network, I am warning everybody about this fact.

Maybe from this point of view the perfect investor/buyer would be the category of people who own a moderate to high amount of BTC: they will initially fund this project and this will attract a lot of more people who are not a part of this category. This way more and more people will have access to ASIC based miner and the BTC will gain strength. Also the competition would learn a lesson (hopefully ASIC monopoly/oligopoly would go down) and stop selling their ASIC-based miner at these prohibitive prices.
mobodick
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April 01, 2013, 12:41:10 PM
 #11

Ultimately, yes, people would like devices and not chips.  However, there have been some challenges and many apparent scams of companies promising to deliver said devices, so the community is understandably wary.  I think getting funding would be difficult.

Another option would be to get funding from a smaller number of investors/partners for the chip development.  There's clearly a demand for chips, both for a small ASIC device (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=161715.0) and others interested in bulk purchases (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=162613.0, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=159257.0).  You can consider me part of this group.

I see people are desperate to buy these chips/miners these days. It's because we are in the days where difficulty is relatively low. As I proposed there is one year needed for this project to have a consumer device and by that time difficulty will be very high. Unlike ASIC-based miner manufacturers who forget to mention that difficulty goes very high when a lot of ASIC miners enter the bitcoin network, I am warning everybody about this fact.

Maybe from this point of view the perfect investor/buyer would be the category of people who own a moderate to high amount of BTC: they will initially fund this project and this will attract a lot of more people who are not a part of this category. This way more and more people will have access to ASIC based miner and the BTC will gain strength. Also the competition would learn a lesson (hopefully ASIC monopoly/oligopoly would go down) and stop selling their ASIC-based miner at these prohibitive prices.

If your ASICS won't outcompete whatever is on the market by then noone will invest in you.
So, what can you say to assure us that you are even capable of designing an ASIC?
Playing around with FPGAs and designing boards is not going to be enough.
papamoi
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April 01, 2013, 01:00:48 PM
 #12

Ultimately, yes, people would like devices and not chips.  However, there have been some challenges and many apparent scams of companies promising to deliver said devices, so the community is understandably wary.  I think getting funding would be difficult.

Another option would be to get funding from a smaller number of investors/partners for the chip development.  There's clearly a demand for chips, both for a small ASIC device (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=161715.0) and others interested in bulk purchases (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=162613.0, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=159257.0).  You can consider me part of this group.

I see people are desperate to buy these chips/miners these days. It's because we are in the days where difficulty is relatively low. As I proposed there is one year needed for this project to have a consumer device and by that time difficulty will be very high. Unlike ASIC-based miner manufacturers who forget to mention that difficulty goes very high when a lot of ASIC miners enter the bitcoin network, I am warning everybody about this fact.

Maybe from this point of view the perfect investor/buyer would be the category of people who own a moderate to high amount of BTC: they will initially fund this project and this will attract a lot of more people who are not a part of this category. This way more and more people will have access to ASIC based miner and the BTC will gain strength. Also the competition would learn a lesson (hopefully ASIC monopoly/oligopoly would go down) and stop selling their ASIC-based miner at these prohibitive prices.

if asic itself is time consuming,maybe there will be some way to do something in between

i ve pmed you
bitfreak91 (OP)
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April 01, 2013, 02:00:24 PM
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If your ASICS won't outcompete whatever is on the market by then noone will invest in you.
So, what can you say to assure us that you are even capable of designing an ASIC?
Playing around with FPGAs and designing boards is not going to be enough.


In my proposal the buyers/investors have powers to take decisions if the project should go on at any point, or if strategy should be changed (in case performance is not considered satisfactory).
There is somebody selling ASICs nowadays and he started from selling FPGA-based devices. I think it is a good point to start and you can add to that a lot of time that I can dedicate to this project and people like you giving advices and making decisions so that things finish good for everybody.
ShadesOfMarble
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April 01, 2013, 02:26:12 PM
 #14

What about using existing chips? I.e. Avalon.

Review of the Spondoolies-Tech SP10 „Dawson“ Bitcoin miner (1.4 TH/s)

[22:35] <Vinnie_win> Did anyone get paid yet? | [22:36] <Isokivi> pirate did!
mobodick
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April 01, 2013, 02:32:01 PM
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If your ASICS won't outcompete whatever is on the market by then noone will invest in you.
So, what can you say to assure us that you are even capable of designing an ASIC?
Playing around with FPGAs and designing boards is not going to be enough.


In my proposal the buyers/investors have powers to take decisions if the project should go on at any point, or if strategy should be changed (in case performance is not considered satisfactory).
There is somebody selling ASICs nowadays and he started from selling FPGA-based devices. I think it is a good point to start and you can add to that a lot of time that I can dedicate to this project and people like you giving advices and making decisions so that things finish good for everybody.

So now you need us for the advice as well as for the funding.
What do we need you for then?
Seems much more like your only goal is to capitalize on the crowd.

So let me ask you again.
What can you say to assure us that you are even capable of designing an ASIC?
bitfreak91 (OP)
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April 01, 2013, 02:56:52 PM
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If your ASICS won't outcompete whatever is on the market by then noone will invest in you.
So, what can you say to assure us that you are even capable of designing an ASIC?
Playing around with FPGAs and designing boards is not going to be enough.


In my proposal the buyers/investors have powers to take decisions if the project should go on at any point, or if strategy should be changed (in case performance is not considered satisfactory).
There is somebody selling ASICs nowadays and he started from selling FPGA-based devices. I think it is a good point to start and you can add to that a lot of time that I can dedicate to this project and people like you giving advices and making decisions so that things finish good for everybody.

So now you need us for the advice as well as for the funding.
What do we need you for then?
Seems much more like your only goal is to capitalize on the crowd.

So let me ask you again.
What can you say to assure us that you are even capable of designing an ASIC?


I can establish this company and do a lot of technical stuff. I can prepare a bunch of RTL variants to be tested in an ASIC test run and from this select a finalist/a few finalists. I can design the system architecture. Of course there is a gap between FPGA and ASIC but there is also time as I proposed.
mobodick
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April 01, 2013, 03:33:13 PM
 #17


If your ASICS won't outcompete whatever is on the market by then noone will invest in you.
So, what can you say to assure us that you are even capable of designing an ASIC?
Playing around with FPGAs and designing boards is not going to be enough.


In my proposal the buyers/investors have powers to take decisions if the project should go on at any point, or if strategy should be changed (in case performance is not considered satisfactory).
There is somebody selling ASICs nowadays and he started from selling FPGA-based devices. I think it is a good point to start and you can add to that a lot of time that I can dedicate to this project and people like you giving advices and making decisions so that things finish good for everybody.

So now you need us for the advice as well as for the funding.
What do we need you for then?
Seems much more like your only goal is to capitalize on the crowd.

So let me ask you again.
What can you say to assure us that you are even capable of designing an ASIC?


I can establish this company and do a lot of technical stuff. I can prepare a bunch of RTL variants to be tested in an ASIC test run and from this select a finalist/a few finalists. I can design the system architecture. Of course there is a gap between FPGA and ASIC but there is also time as I proposed.

I can imagine that, since the SHA256 algorith used in bitcoin is pretty well defined, that pooping out RTLs won't be very hard. I think that the functional design cannot become much more optimized than it is now.
The only place where you will be able to compete is at the physical design stage.

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April 01, 2013, 03:41:31 PM
 #18

You mean those PCBs work with Virtex6? Because we can not see a photo of the FPGA without heatsink and a photo of hashing on PC?
bitfreak91 (OP)
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April 01, 2013, 04:06:44 PM
 #19


I can imagine that, since the SHA256 algorith used in bitcoin is pretty well defined, that pooping out RTLs won't be very hard. I think that the functional design cannot become much more optimized than it is now.
The only place where you will be able to compete is at the physical design stage.


You are right about that, physical optimization will bring such an ASIC to a better performance vs. actual miners. But that is true only when using the same node as the other manufacturer (I consider Avalon the only at this moment!).

In this project we can use smaller technology node, and as more people fund this project the better will be the ASIC.

You can have a lot of advantages over the current market offer: small price, miner performance, eliminate the possibility of the manufacturer mining in the backyard etc. What other proposal can be better than this when I have no money to do this project? OK, maybe another person with an ASIC background, but the funding scheme is good I think.
bitfreak91 (OP)
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April 01, 2013, 04:13:24 PM
 #20

What about using existing chips? I.e. Avalon.

For the moment they are the best public solution in the bitcoin network. But they can be taken out of the game soon if they don't come up with a better solution.

Maybe this is a strategy of theirs: to start selling chips using old technology and then giving better solutions when the market is hungry again.
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