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Author Topic: Yacoin Price about to Jump  (Read 10278 times)
zero3112
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May 17, 2013, 04:14:23 PM
 #141

How is Yacoin cpu mining only and doesnt work with gpu mining?  I thought litecoin was suppose to be cpu mining only coin and everyone was told gpu's would not work on litecoin now look at litecoin.

R_Lem
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May 17, 2013, 04:25:01 PM
Last edit: May 18, 2013, 01:51:44 AM by R_Lem
 #142

How is Yacoin cpu mining only and doesnt work with gpu mining?  I thought litecoin was suppose to be cpu mining only coin and everyone was told gpu's would not work on litecoin now look at litecoin.

Getting GPU mining to work with YAC has proved to be more difficult than most expected and while it's not impossible that there are those out there doing it, there's no proof of it and no one has come forward showing it can be done.
Here's a couple quotes of WindMaster (who's currently working on the hard fork  (client fork) for YAC and future development https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=206577.40) on GPU mining YAC and about his attempt to get GPU mining to work during the early days of release.


This one I'm unsure about.  I thought for sure that if there were a significant number of GPU implementations floating around, someone was going to post one by now (as a claim to fame) as soon as GPU mining would have become unprofitable (which by my calculations is probably getting close to becoming unprofitable as YAC prices drop).

Anyone that has followed my posts through the days after the coin launched knows that I experimented with GPU implementation of scrypt+chacha20/8(N,1,1), the hashing algorithm used by YAC.  I never got as far as making it work with cgminer or mining with it.  I just created a basic OpenCL kernel (no cgminer interface), performed some benchmarks at various values of N, didn't bother doing any major optimizations, and decided I needed something that would go significantly faster (my GPU farm only consists of 24 Radeon 5850's and 24 Radeon 6950's), as it took me about 1.5 days to do it and difficulty was already skyrocketing.  At that point I dropped it and went straight to writing a Verilog implementation for FPGA's, knowing that I could probably only pull that off up through N=32 and would have a limited time to make it happen (in the end, I got about 1.5 days of FPGA mining in before N=64).

We won't know for sure until someone posts a modified cgminer what their hash rates ended up.  I stopped mining altogether at N=64, as that basically killed viability of my FPGA implementation.  I can still place'n'route an FPGA design at N=64 but the projected clock rates from the Xilinx tools are dramatically slower than for N=32 with nearly 4x the logic area (meaning only 1/4 as many parallel computation cores are possible in the available logic area) and it just doesn't look like it would be worth the effort.  N=128 won't even place'n'route, the design is just too dense.  So at this point I'm going to state that I believe N=64 kills profitability of any FPGA attempt (with current FPGA technology) and N=128 isn't even routable and placeable on current FPGA technology (at least without going to off-chip memory, DDR3 or otherwise).

Currently I get far more YAC by buying it up on BTER than I would by mining, with any of the technologies I have available.  My GPU farm is mining LTC right now.  If there are indeed GPU farms mining YAC, I'd be expecting them to start switching back to LTC or BTC for profitability reasons either now or in the near future (well, unless YAC value goes way way up).

So, that's about all the answers I have at the moment.

Looking at the graphed data, it appears that N very roughly approximates Moore's law (with some step lengths being shorter than 18/24 months, and others being larger).

Assuming my data is correct, what is everyone's opinion of N's growth? Does it seem realistic to a) keep GPUs out and b) keep CPU mining feasible?

Offhand, for question (b), it appears from your data that CPU mining continues being feasible for quite a long time.  Your data shows 512MB needed to calculate a hash in the year 2023, and that's an amount of RAM that I think everyone probably has available today for hashing.  Disclaimer - I haven't double-checked that your data is correct.

On question (a), I doubt 512MB needed to hash is enough to exclude GPU's, especially a decade out.  It may be enough to keep GPU's from having a huge massive advantage over CPU's once both technologies start having to hit slow external RAM and not fast internal L1/L2 caches, but we won't know for sure until we see what the future holds for GPU development, amounts of RAM on GPU's (and thus how many simultaneous hashes can be calculated in parallel), whether GPU's start getting massive quantities of fast L1/L2 cache like CPU's, what the ratio of L1/L2 cache in CPU's vs. GPU's looks like in a decade, etc..  Probably too early to tell.  We also need to see some of the GPU implementations or adaptations of cgminer released so we can see what they're achieving for hash rates.  Unlike Litecoin, where (almost) everyone derived their OpenCL implementation from Reaper, for YACoin, I suspect there were multiple independent adaptations of cgminer that occurred with no direct contact between the people performing each implementation.  Too early to tell on that as well, or determine exactly how widespread GPU mining of YACoin actually was/is.

The possibility also exists that other technologies other than CPU and GPU options come into existence and widespread application during that timeframe that we can't yet anticipate, or that someone could identify a TMTO shortcut in scrypt+chacha20/8, as happened with the TMTO shortcut for scrypt+salsa20/8 that made GPU's practical for calculating Litecoin hashes.
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May 17, 2013, 06:37:51 PM
 #143

Here's a couple quotes of WindMaster (who's currently working on the hard fork of YAC and future development https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=206577.40) on GPU mining YAC and about his attempt to get GPU mining to work during the early days of release.

For clarification, I forked the source code for the YACoin client to continue development since the original developer pulled a Houdini after the coin's launch (something that will be familiar to anyone watching any of the recent alt-coin launches).  Many people in the crytocurrency community will know the term hard fork to mean forking the blockchain and/or implementing incompatible changes that would require everyone to upgrade to continue using the correct blockchain.  No such changes are planned for YAC, everyone is free to continue to use whichever YAC client they wish.  I just think mine will be the better choice once we've finished ironing out some bug fixes and added features in the coming days and prepare for a more formal release that will be worth upgrading to.  The "official" YACoin client is, umm, a bit rugged.
R_Lem
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May 17, 2013, 08:39:38 PM
 #144

Here's a couple quotes of WindMaster (who's currently working on the hard fork of YAC and future development https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=206577.40) on GPU mining YAC and about his attempt to get GPU mining to work during the early days of release.

For clarification, I forked the source code for the YACoin client to continue development since the original developer pulled a Houdini after the coin's launch (something that will be familiar to anyone watching any of the recent alt-coin launches).  Many people in the crytocurrency community will know the term hard fork to mean forking the blockchain and/or implementing incompatible changes that would require everyone to upgrade to continue using the correct blockchain.  No such changes are planned for YAC, everyone is free to continue to use whichever YAC client they wish.  I just think mine will be the better choice once we've finished ironing out some bug fixes and added features in the coming days and prepare for a more formal release that will be worth upgrading to.  The "official" YACoin client is, umm, a bit rugged.

Ya I'm still learning much about crypto-curreny and actually looked up more about forking before I posted about your work on /r/yacoin. I used your words 'unofficial client fork' there. I should probably check the other places I posted and correct it.

So when moving to the new client, new coins created from that point forward will exist in the forked blockchain only? ...coins found before the fork will be valid in either blockchain? I need to do a bunch more reading.
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May 17, 2013, 11:16:45 PM
Last edit: May 17, 2013, 11:55:07 PM by WindMaster
 #145

So when moving to the new client, new coins created from that point forward will exist in the forked blockchain only? ...coins found before the fork will be valid in either blockchain? I need to do a bunch more reading.

No, we're not doing anything with the blockchain.  We're just continuing to improve the client since the original developer dropped the ball.  The only case where forking the blockchain is needed is when changes that wouldn't be compatible with the existing client are needed.  No such changes are needed or planned for YAC.  Blocks mined will with either client will be in the same YAC blockchain.

The term "fork" in our case is the term GitHub uses when someone takes one person's source repository and wants to work on it as a separate repository of their own.  Nothing to do with the blockchain!  Just the source code for the client is being forked, because we're interested in continuing to improve it and are leaving the original (uninvolved) developer behind if he's not going to take the lead.
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May 17, 2013, 11:34:23 PM
 #146

Go YAC, I think nows the time to buy.  Thoughts?
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May 17, 2013, 11:53:02 PM
 #147

Go YAC, I think nows the time to buy.  Thoughts?

It was back at 0.0003 but its still a great deal and easy to make profit on.
R_Lem
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May 18, 2013, 01:49:09 AM
 #148

So when moving to the new client, new coins created from that point forward will exist in the forked blockchain only? ...coins found before the fork will be valid in either blockchain? I need to do a bunch more reading.

No, we're not doing anything with the blockchain.  We're just continuing to improve the client since the original developer dropped the ball.  The only case where forking the blockchain is needed is when changes that wouldn't be compatible with the existing client are needed.  No such changes are needed or planned for YAC.  Blocks mined will with either client will be in the same YAC blockchain.

The term "fork" in our case is the term GitHub uses when someone takes one person's source repository and wants to work on it as a separate repository of their own.  Nothing to do with the blockchain!  Just the source code for the client is being forked, because we're interested in continuing to improve it and are leaving the original (uninvolved) developer behind if he's not going to take the lead.

Thanks for clarifying.
Joe_Bauers
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May 18, 2013, 03:15:40 AM
 #149

Here's a couple quotes of WindMaster (who's currently working on the hard fork of YAC and future development https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=206577.40) on GPU mining YAC and about his attempt to get GPU mining to work during the early days of release.

For clarification, I forked the source code for the YACoin client to continue development since the original developer pulled a Houdini after the coin's launch (something that will be familiar to anyone watching any of the recent alt-coin launches).  Many people in the crytocurrency community will know the term hard fork to mean forking the blockchain and/or implementing incompatible changes that would require everyone to upgrade to continue using the correct blockchain.  No such changes are planned for YAC, everyone is free to continue to use whichever YAC client they wish.  I just think mine will be the better choice once we've finished ironing out some bug fixes and added features in the coming days and prepare for a more formal release that will be worth upgrading to.  The "official" YACoin client is, umm, a bit rugged.

Have you had any contact with the admin(s) at yacoin.org?  It would be nice if they were on board with updating their links to your version rather than pocopoco's once the fixes are completed. Not that it really matters I suppose since WAY more people would see it here anyway.
zero3112
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May 18, 2013, 03:32:00 AM
 #150

Yacoin froze a second but theirs wired glitches that showed novacoin NVC instead of YACoin but then it changed back to YAC when it un-froze.  I also like the logo for the official yacoin but the client doesn't implement this yet.  The client doesn't yet show this and instead it shows the icon from novacoin for me.

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May 21, 2013, 02:12:45 PM
 #151

Look at that 5 green candles ... something like copypaste Smiley

DTC: DMcKNp47fNtgM7sritK9GfJEQ1DzME5nwk
BTC: 1FgUGra685ZwkrX5VnRvfaYp4bHJhC7x4H
bitdwarf
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May 21, 2013, 02:36:00 PM
 #152

Sell orders are really thin now. Of course there may be more dumpers lurking in the shadows, but in any case nobody seems eager to fill the buy orders at 0.0004

𝖄𝖆𝖈: YF3feU4PNLHrjwa1zV63BcCdWVk5z6DAh5 · 𝕭𝖙𝖈: 12F78M4oaNmyGE5C25ZixarG2Nk6UBEqme
Ɏ: "the altcoin for the everyman, where the sweat on one's brow can be used to cool one's overheating CPU" -- theprofileth
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May 21, 2013, 03:13:11 PM
 #153

Jump water Grin
bitdwarf
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May 21, 2013, 07:08:44 PM
 #154


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Ɏ: "the altcoin for the everyman, where the sweat on one's brow can be used to cool one's overheating CPU" -- theprofileth
seleme
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May 21, 2013, 07:52:08 PM
 #155

there were some big buys yesterday, those guys shouldn't sell easily

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darkproton
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May 21, 2013, 07:55:29 PM
 #156

Yeah, I think it is getting near time to buy big. It took a selling but withstood pretty strong IMHO.
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May 23, 2013, 04:08:01 AM
Last edit: May 23, 2013, 04:23:17 AM by cycloid
 #157

over all I like how the price been holding up Smiley  

Lets see how it holds up over 1 year



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May 23, 2013, 04:27:32 AM
 #158

It's a bit weird, on Vircurex orders are being executed at 0.000598 (albeit in the 50-400 YACs range), while on Bter coins are being sold at 0.000435. Shocked

𝖄𝖆𝖈: YF3feU4PNLHrjwa1zV63BcCdWVk5z6DAh5 · 𝕭𝖙𝖈: 12F78M4oaNmyGE5C25ZixarG2Nk6UBEqme
Ɏ: "the altcoin for the everyman, where the sweat on one's brow can be used to cool one's overheating CPU" -- theprofileth
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May 23, 2013, 10:35:50 PM
 #159

over all I like how the price been holding up Smiley  

Lets see how it holds up over 1 year




Here's hoping it is at the current level of Novacoin 0.03 BTC
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May 26, 2013, 08:12:47 AM
 #160

It's much better buy YaCoin than mining with current price.

You can buy YaCoin from http://bter.com/trade/yac_btc.
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