BenRickert
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November 08, 2017, 10:14:08 PM |
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Batch 21st-30th - on the way...
They can't wait to get those popcorn machines out the door!! LOL
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lentyna
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November 08, 2017, 10:19:06 PM |
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Which pool do you recommend? It's so odd that some calculators show -$10/month for me, and some show $150/profit month.
I still use granatgas-pool and it was good to me, my 2nd choice is nicehash Thank you I have joined your pool . Can you tell me what command you enter into D3? I'm a little confused. I put below but I don't know if it's optimal. -o stratum+tcp://stratum-us.granatgas-pool.info:1111#xnsub -u <WALLET_BTC_ADDRESS> -p c=BTC
URL: stratum+tcp://stratum-us.granatgas-pool.info:1111 WORKER: WALLET_ADDRESS PASSWORD: c=DASH,d=16 Thank you! I'm getting about $6.50/day it appears. Sounds about right.
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davemanet
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November 08, 2017, 11:29:48 PM |
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once these things are setup, is there much maintenance needed?
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Dopert
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November 08, 2017, 11:30:13 PM |
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Just got confirmation of shipping for 21-30 batch but not on all orders Seems like power supplies aren't included, invoice shows 25 KG but Tracking just 15 KG Chips. Your right. Same for me. Bet i have to pay dubble tax over psu, because Bitmain did not put right shipping bill on it.
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madmartyk
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2702
Merit: 1030
Yes I am a pirate, 300 years too late!
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November 08, 2017, 11:37:14 PM |
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Batch 21st-30th - on the way...
They can't wait to get those popcorn machines out the door!! LOL Mine still showing unshipped.
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Peke
Member
Offline
Activity: 117
Merit: 14
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November 09, 2017, 12:33:49 AM |
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So not only they send us toasters, they send us toasters we can't even use because of no PSU's. Oh boy, what a scam it is by Bitmain flooding the market with D3's. Well, it was a risk but fool me once, shame on me and so on..
Waiting for my two pieces of shit to arrive by the end of the month.
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grn
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November 09, 2017, 12:45:51 AM |
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thanks for the tips on which pool to join. so there are lots of different calculators with misinformation. anyone know which one is right?
I wouldn't necessarily say they have misinformation. I would say they all estimate differently. If you have multiple miners, you can always point them individually at different pools simultaneously and compare the results. M Which pool do you recommend? It's so odd that some calculators show -$10/month for me, and some show $150/profit month. Try mining-dutch.nl Multi profit switching pool pays in coin of your choice
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How is that Lexical analysis working out bickneleski?
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COINKING84
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November 09, 2017, 01:21:43 AM |
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So not only they send us toasters, they send us toasters we can't even use because of no PSU's. Oh boy, what a scam it is by Bitmain flooding the market with D3's. Well, it was a risk but fool me once, shame on me and so on..
Waiting for my two pieces of shit to arrive by the end of the month.
I laugh to keep from crying. lol but man that was a good one buddy!
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BenRickert
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November 09, 2017, 01:35:05 AM |
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once these things are setup, is there much maintenance needed?
If you let them run at 537 frequency, you will likely see high chip temperature and a LOT of HW errors that will eventually crash a hashing board. You'll know this by a row of xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx in your ASIC status. Then you'll have to reset the machine to get that board back online. To me this is the server telling you that 537 frequency is at the edge of redline and if we run them there for extended times, they will not last long. I have had excellent luck down clocking these units to 525 frequency ( or lower if it's hot out ) and running fans at 100%. There, they get very stable. No HW errors and no boards crashing. You'll still be hashing around high 17's or low 18 thousand mh. Once you fool with it and find the "sweet spot of clock speed and fan speed for your environment, they require zero to no maintenance. Just clean the heat sinks every month or so unless you have a high level air filtration system.
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Gladimor
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1050
Merit: 1000
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November 09, 2017, 01:35:14 AM Last edit: November 09, 2017, 02:04:01 AM by Gladimor |
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So not only they send us toasters, they send us toasters we can't even use because of no PSU's. Oh boy, what a scam it is by Bitmain flooding the market with D3's. Well, it was a risk but fool me once, shame on me and so on..
Waiting for my two pieces of shit to arrive by the end of the month.
I laugh to keep from crying. lol but man that was a good one buddy! Ahahahaha that was a good one Profitability really has gone down to the gutter. Only hopes are for Bitmain to release multi-algo firmware.
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Mining since 2014
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BenRickert
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November 09, 2017, 01:40:10 AM |
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So not only they send us toasters, they send us toasters we can't even use because of no PSU's. Oh boy, what a scam it is by Bitmain flooding the market with D3's. Well, it was a risk but fool me once, shame on me and so on..
Waiting for my two pieces of shit to arrive by the end of the month.
I laugh to keep from crying. lol but man that was a good one buddy! Ahahahaha that was a good one Profitability really has gone down to the gutter. Only hopes are for Bitmain to release multi-algo firmware.OMG.....here we go again.....someone please tell him......
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Gladimor
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1050
Merit: 1000
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November 09, 2017, 02:08:23 AM |
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So not only they send us toasters, they send us toasters we can't even use because of no PSU's. Oh boy, what a scam it is by Bitmain flooding the market with D3's. Well, it was a risk but fool me once, shame on me and so on..
Waiting for my two pieces of shit to arrive by the end of the month.
I laugh to keep from crying. lol but man that was a good one buddy! Ahahahaha that was a good one Profitability really has gone down to the gutter. Only hopes are for Bitmain to release multi-algo firmware.OMG.....here we go again.....someone please tell him...... The only person that needs telling is yourself. Do you know what X11 is? It is a composite of 11 hash functions- blake, bmw, groestl, jh, keccak, skein, luffa, cubehash, shavite, simd, and echo. The ASIC has a certain amount of cores allotted to each hash function. All Bitmain needs to do release firmware/modified cgminer that allows the isolated hash functions to be used. Considering how they like to squeeze their competitors (cough cough Baikal) out of the industry, it really wouldn't be a surprising if a firmware upgrade allowing multi algo mining was released.
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Mining since 2014
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youni
Newbie
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Activity: 10
Merit: 0
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November 09, 2017, 02:26:56 AM |
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Yes, X11 is a composite of 11 algos, but the hardware is designed to give you the result after running through all those algos. You can't just tell the hardware to stop in the middle of computing and give you the results for a specific algo. ASIC's usually are optimized and made very efficient at doing 1 specific function, in this case x11. To add or do only a specific algo requires not only a firmware change, but now also a hardware change.
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Gladimor
Legendary
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Activity: 1050
Merit: 1000
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November 09, 2017, 02:48:45 AM |
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Yes, X11 is a composite of 11 algos, but the hardware is designed to give you the result after running through all those algos. You can't just tell the hardware to stop in the middle of computing and give you the results for a specific algo. ASIC's usually are optimized and made very efficient at doing 1 specific function, in this case x11. To add or do only a specific algo requires not only a firmware change, but now also a hardware change.
No hardware change is necessary if you already have the cores that hash a specific algo, and have the required devices for additional compute. X11 is a chained mining algo that uses multiple rounds of each of its algos to deliver it's final hash result. At the base of all the hashing are the dedicated full custom cores that compute each algorithm. The controller w/ the cgminer implementation is responsible for how the work is done. At the end you have the controller that runs the X11 cgminer implementation that uses pretty much all the cores on the ASIC. What Bitmain needs to release is a custom cgminer implementation that isolates each of the core regions (each region of cores does a specific hash function), and allows mining ONLY for the specific hash function. You'll basically be using a fraction of the ASIC's hashcores and power usage will even be less.
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Mining since 2014
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CryptoPeter
Newbie
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Activity: 19
Merit: 0
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November 09, 2017, 02:58:52 AM |
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at least dash is worth 320 dollars now few days ago it was like 275 dollars lol. Hopefully it goes up to 350+ in the next few days
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BenRickert
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November 09, 2017, 04:00:26 AM |
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Yes, X11 is a composite of 11 algos, but the hardware is designed to give you the result after running through all those algos. You can't just tell the hardware to stop in the middle of computing and give you the results for a specific algo. ASIC's usually are optimized and made very efficient at doing 1 specific function, in this case x11. To add or do only a specific algo requires not only a firmware change, but now also a hardware change.
No hardware change is necessary if you already have the cores that hash a specific algo, and have the required devices for additional compute. X11 is a chained mining algo that uses multiple rounds of each of its algos to deliver it's final hash result. At the base of all the hashing are the dedicated full custom cores that compute each algorithm. The controller w/ the cgminer implementation is responsible for how the work is done. At the end you have the controller that runs the X11 cgminer implementation that uses pretty much all the cores on the ASIC. What Bitmain needs to release is a custom cgminer implementation that isolates each of the core regions (each region of cores does a specific hash function), and allows mining ONLY for the specific hash function. You'll basically be using a fraction of the ASIC's hashcores and power usage will even be less. Well then we'll be waiting for your solution and implementation. You're the ONLY person, including developers and programmers that have stated this to be the case. While the mechanics of what you're saying makes sense, the implementation of the changes obviously requires more than just a "firmware upgrade". If you're right, then you're the ONLY person that knows this. If that is in fact the case, I'm sure you could get a group funding for your trip to China to help the Bitmain crew out with this. Bon Voyage.
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mdude77
Legendary
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Activity: 1540
Merit: 1001
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November 09, 2017, 04:13:39 AM |
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If you're right, then you're the ONLY person that knows this. If that is in fact the case, I'm sure you could get a group funding for your trip to China to help the Bitmain crew out with this. Bon Voyage.
lol M
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I mine at Kano's Pool because it pays the best and is completely transparent! Come join me!
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mohima1230
Newbie
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Activity: 26
Merit: 0
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November 09, 2017, 04:51:46 AM |
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Batch 21st-30th - on the way...
They can't wait to get those popcorn machines out the door!! LOL so more network hash and more Difficulty. Winter is comming. Not a bad idea to use as a expensive room heater and free noise as you feel you are inside of a mining firm.
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Gladimor
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1050
Merit: 1000
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November 09, 2017, 04:53:47 AM |
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Yes, X11 is a composite of 11 algos, but the hardware is designed to give you the result after running through all those algos. You can't just tell the hardware to stop in the middle of computing and give you the results for a specific algo. ASIC's usually are optimized and made very efficient at doing 1 specific function, in this case x11. To add or do only a specific algo requires not only a firmware change, but now also a hardware change.
No hardware change is necessary if you already have the cores that hash a specific algo, and have the required devices for additional compute. X11 is a chained mining algo that uses multiple rounds of each of its algos to deliver it's final hash result. At the base of all the hashing are the dedicated full custom cores that compute each algorithm. The controller w/ the cgminer implementation is responsible for how the work is done. At the end you have the controller that runs the X11 cgminer implementation that uses pretty much all the cores on the ASIC. What Bitmain needs to release is a custom cgminer implementation that isolates each of the core regions (each region of cores does a specific hash function), and allows mining ONLY for the specific hash function. You'll basically be using a fraction of the ASIC's hashcores and power usage will even be less. Well then we'll be waiting for your solution and implementation. You're the ONLY person, including developers and programmers that have stated this to be the case. While the mechanics of what you're saying makes sense, the implementation of the changes obviously requires more than just a "firmware upgrade". If you're right, then you're the ONLY person that knows this. If that is in fact the case, I'm sure you could get a group funding for your trip to China to help the Bitmain crew out with this. Bon Voyage. If Bitmain cared for community involvement in improving their software, all of their custom firmware would be open-sourced. They would release the data sheets and schematics for their mining devices. I'm sure they have some of the best developers in the industry working for them. And I'm probably the shittiest coder around so I wouldn't be suited to the task anyhow
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Mining since 2014
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shaninium
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November 09, 2017, 05:25:43 AM |
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Yes, X11 is a composite of 11 algos, but the hardware is designed to give you the result after running through all those algos. You can't just tell the hardware to stop in the middle of computing and give you the results for a specific algo. ASIC's usually are optimized and made very efficient at doing 1 specific function, in this case x11. To add or do only a specific algo requires not only a firmware change, but now also a hardware change.
No hardware change is necessary if you already have the cores that hash a specific algo, and have the required devices for additional compute. X11 is a chained mining algo that uses multiple rounds of each of its algos to deliver it's final hash result. At the base of all the hashing are the dedicated full custom cores that compute each algorithm. The controller w/ the cgminer implementation is responsible for how the work is done. At the end you have the controller that runs the X11 cgminer implementation that uses pretty much all the cores on the ASIC. What Bitmain needs to release is a custom cgminer implementation that isolates each of the core regions (each region of cores does a specific hash function), and allows mining ONLY for the specific hash function. You'll basically be using a fraction of the ASIC's hashcores and power usage will even be less. Well then we'll be waiting for your solution and implementation. You're the ONLY person, including developers and programmers that have stated this to be the case. While the mechanics of what you're saying makes sense, the implementation of the changes obviously requires more than just a "firmware upgrade". If you're right, then you're the ONLY person that knows this. If that is in fact the case, I'm sure you could get a group funding for your trip to China to help the Bitmain crew out with this. Bon Voyage. If Bitmain cared for community involvement in improving their software, all of their custom firmware would be open-sourced. They would release the data sheets and schematics for their mining devices. I'm sure they have some of the best developers in the industry working for them. And I'm probably the shittiest coder around so I wouldn't be suited to the task anyhow Are you saying each d3 chip has 11 cores?
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