it all happens in the blink of an eye... if you go to google.cn youre sending data and receiving a reply in under a tenth of a second to china.. quite amazing when you think about it
Not really, considering how fast electricity moves :-)
anyway, same scenario for bitcoin... you might have a latency of 50ms to the network but someone else might have 40ms..
That would imply they found the solution to my block within 10ms of me finding mine.
However, I think I see what's happening, as the new block detection only pings every minute, possibly just by default. As such, my miner will mine for a minute, not knowing whether there is a new block.
In other words, if there is really a block every 6 seconds, on average my miner will find a rejected share 9 out of 10 times. The slower the rate of blocks, the lower the rate of rejects.
Does this make sense?
.b