ChartBuddy
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July 17, 2021, 12:01:33 AM |
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xhomerx10
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July 17, 2021, 12:35:24 AM Last edit: July 17, 2021, 01:28:12 PM by xhomerx10 |
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This is a very interesting rule on dell website The 3070 pulls under 260 watts The 3080 pulls under 325 watts. As a long time miner this is big news. The ban is in 6 states. It is for 3070 and for 3080 models Excuse my language but what the flying fuck?! Arbitrary hardware-based power consumption rules? Jesus. Wait, are those gasoline powered GPUs?
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ChartBuddy
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July 17, 2021, 01:01:26 AM |
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vapourminer
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what is this "brake pedal" you speak of?
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July 17, 2021, 01:02:17 AM |
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This is a very interesting rule on dell website The 3070 pulls under 260 watts The 3080 pulls under 325 watts. As a long time miner this is big news. The ban is in 6 states. It is for 3070 and for 3080 models Excuse my language but what the flying fuck?! Arbitrary hardware-based power consumption rules? Jesus. Wait, are those gasoline powered GPUs? whats funny (well its not really) is phil has a lot of solar powered gear. and they wouldnt sell to him if he was in one of those states.
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cAPSLOCK
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Maybe the Mars is the future!
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July 17, 2021, 01:14:59 AM |
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Pepper Your Angus
Sub $30,000 today.
Trolls like this dickhead show up at super interesting times!
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xhomerx10
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July 17, 2021, 01:29:43 AM |
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This is a very interesting rule on dell website The 3070 pulls under 260 watts The 3080 pulls under 325 watts. As a long time miner this is big news. The ban is in 6 states. It is for 3070 and for 3080 models Excuse my language but what the flying fuck?! Arbitrary hardware-based power consumption rules? Jesus. Wait, are those gasoline powered GPUs? whats funny (well its not really) is phil has a lot of solar powered gear. and they wouldnt sell to him if he was in one of those states. I was thinking the same thing. I guess you have to drive 4000 miles round trip in Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 @ 14 mpg to pick one up then
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cAPSLOCK
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Maybe the Mars is the future!
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July 17, 2021, 02:01:16 AM |
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Good stuff. If he really was Satoshi, he would be hiding in a whole or on some island, enjoying his non-main wallet riches. (that he farmed with his CPU or GPU like the rest of the planet) Here's a thought experiment: Satoshi CPU mined coins in the first couple of years. Knowing that everything is visible on chain, and knowing so obviously that no one else was mining within the first few months, he know that all those blocks could be associated with him until there were enough other people mining blocks. He continues mining, but as soon as there are others, he slowly moves some of those later mined coins to other addresses and keeps doing so every few months, leaving the entire first year (except the one he sent to Hal) untouched. The early coins never move. The coins after a certain block or date have been moving every year since. ... 1m coins do not move. 100k or 10k move (around the same time or after the first pizza was bought) ... they keep moving once a year or so ... 1k is cashed out some time between then and now, the remaining 99k or 9k is still out there looking like everyone else. Or it's quite possible none of the coins move at all too. Who really knows? This is pretty much exactly how I believe he did it. There are only two scenarios, I think. 1. He's dead. 2. He has done more or less what you proposed. He is (was?) a genius, level headed, calm, deeply understood game theory and understood what it would mean to use those coins from the early mining. If he is still alive he has had the discipline to lay down riches of huge proportions. And this is no small extent done because he knows it would endanger the stability of the invention if he touched those. And if his identity was known, especially at the beginning (you are here) it would be detrimental to the project, and dangerous for him. What a badass.
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ChartBuddy
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July 17, 2021, 02:01:26 AM |
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cAPSLOCK
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Maybe the Mars is the future!
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July 17, 2021, 02:23:59 AM |
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There are also known addresses with no private keys. There are no addresses with no private keys. Better formulation: It hasn't been proved that there's an address that has no private keys. On average, each one has 2 96 different keys. There are addresses for which the possibility of there being a known private key is practically entirely impossible. For example - these: 1BitcoinEaterAddressDontSendf59kuE 1CounterpartyXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXUWLpVr 1111111111111111111114oLvT2 The reason the private key is almost certainly unknown is these addresses are like vanity addresses. I own a 16 core (32 thread) Ryzen 9 5950 (Monero ASIC lol). This is one of the most powerful consumer CPUs you can currently buy, and actually stomps a lot of the Server type chips as well. Executing the command vanitygen 1BitcoinEaterAddressDoNotS (Unfortunately I cannot even search for the last three letters) starts a search that on my chip is calculated to have a 50/50 chance of finding an address starting like this in: 74,159,994,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 years. For a little (impossible) perspective the universe is thought to be only: 14,000,000,000 years old. So... there are no known private keys for those addresses without some kind of backdoor for SHA2.
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WaltKitty
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July 17, 2021, 02:29:21 AM |
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cAPSLOCK
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Maybe the Mars is the future!
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July 17, 2021, 02:37:20 AM |
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Bank of America approves trading for Bitcoin
I really feel witty about these cases and how does these banks change their statements witnessing growing demand for bitcoin among their clients. Nearly 3 in 4 professional investors in Bank of America survey see bitcoin as a bubble.Some 74% of those who responded to the Bank of America Fund Manager Survey for April said they see bitcoin as a bubble. Buying btc is like owing 60 carsAnd we probably have a thread for this one on the forum.But see how time flies from bitcoin is scam to we accept or offer btc services,bitcoin has came a long way. I agree with BoA on this one! Buying a single bitcoin most certainly will be worth about 60 cars one day!
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cAPSLOCK
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July 17, 2021, 02:47:47 AM |
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There are also known addresses with no private keys. There are no addresses with no private keys. Better formulation: It hasn't been proved that there's an address that has no private keys. On average, each one has 2 96 different keys. There are the "zero" addresses, formed from a private key with all zeroes. This is often seen in altcoins / shitcoins where they publicly burn coins. There are also the vanity looking addresses such as 1BitcoinEater: https://blockchain.info/address/1BitcoinEaterAddressDontSendf59kuEIt's never sent any coins, always just received them. Very unlikely anyone has the private key to that address, or might even be possibly no such private key can map to it. We do not know for sure, as like you said, it can not be proven. However, it is my opinion that the chances of anyone ever able to spend from that particular address is close to zero. Maybe 0.000000001% or something. Yes, there is a chance. As far as I am concerned, it's impossible. Your definition of the word impossible may differ from mine. Normal usage of the word is usually hyperbole, but the meaning and intent is clear. It is impossible. Won't stop you from trying, but I'm sure you or anyone else will fail. 31h1vYVSYuKP6AhS86fbRdMw9XHieotbST https://www.blockchain.com/btc/address/31h1vYVSYuKP6AhS86fbRdMw9XHieotbSTThis address is unspendable. And this time I mean it in the correct sense of the word. It's a hash from zeroes. You can see coins sent to it, but never spent. Since addresses are encoded hashes, start with a hash, of which it would be nearly impossible to find the pre-image, e.g. assume a script hash of 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000. Encode that into a valid address:
bs58 -c 050000000000000000000000000000000000000000 31h1vYVSYuKP6AhS86fbRdMw9XHieotbST
Here is another address: 1CounterpartyXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXUWLpVr Feel free to try and find out the private key to that one, as no one knows it. It was generated without knowing the private key, just an address. My use of the word impossible for this one just means very highly improbable. Yeah... maybe I should read before I post about exactly what you have already posted. However I am going to pick a nit. Finding the private key for a known address is not impossible. It is entirely 100% possible. It is, however, PRACTICALLY impossible. That is also a phrase that people almost always use hyperbolically. But it is the literal truth. Is it possible to flip a coin 256 times and on the very first try hit the private key for the coinbase address in block 2 (1HLoD9E4SDFFPDiYfNYnkBLQ85Y51J3Zb1) But of course it will not happen even in a billion billion years. That one from the hash of all zeros is nifty. I am surprised craig wright has not claimed that and started court cases to have it turned over to him. I be he could use the $99.99 (how weird that that is exactly what's in it at the very moment.) (Don't get mad at me! I agree with you that finding one of those private keys is IMPOSSIBLE. But my inner AKCHUALLY needs to say the word practically in front of it not too be all itchy and scratchy inside.)
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cAPSLOCK
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Maybe the Mars is the future!
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July 17, 2021, 02:52:27 AM |
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who hold the private key? lol The universe has that one.
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ChartBuddy
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July 17, 2021, 03:01:34 AM |
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ChartBuddy
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July 17, 2021, 04:01:26 AM |
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heslo
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July 17, 2021, 04:29:03 AM |
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This is a very interesting rule on dell website The 3070 pulls under 260 watts The 3080 pulls under 325 watts. As a long time miner this is big news. The ban is in 6 states. It is for 3070 and for 3080 models That is absolutely ridiculous
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ChartBuddy
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July 17, 2021, 05:01:25 AM |
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Hueristic
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Doomed to see the future and unable to prevent it
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July 17, 2021, 05:04:54 AM |
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This is a very interesting rule on dell website
The 3070 pulls under 260 watts The 3080 pulls under 325 watts.
As a long time miner this is big news.
Maybe this is why the alienware onboard chips were gimped in bios.
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JayJuanGee
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Self-Custody is a right. Say no to"Non-custodial"
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July 17, 2021, 05:14:22 AM Last edit: July 17, 2021, 06:56:44 AM by JayJuanGee Merited by El duderino_ (3), xhomerx10 (1) |
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That data ONLY goes to February 2021... and February 2021, it looks as if the mining share of China may well have been estimated to have been ONLY a bit above 40% at that time. So seems that a lot of that mining power that had been in China in 2020 and even into early 2021, seems to have already been migrating out of China, and is not there as much by February 2021 (of course, 40% is still a decent amount).. but sure, we might have to see how the data evolves in terms of how the mining share numbers look when we get reports from the last 3-4 months.. and sure it would be interesting to fill in the gap of data including March 2021 and thereafter - even though we really had seen the largest of mining hashrate drops in June 2021 with hashrate drops of -16%, -5.3% and -27% in the past three respective difficulty periods.. Can see those historical difficulty drops, here on btc.com, and the current hash rate of about an estimated -4.5% drop approximately, here.. even though in the past several days the hashrate seems to be going back up quite a bit.. so that difficulty drop might not be so great this particular 2-week period, which is about to end and due to retarget in about 17.5 hours or so, as I type.. this post. Edited: Added the links to specify a bit more on the numbers that I had initially outlined in this post.
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