ir.hn
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Activity: 322
Merit: 54
Consensus is Constitution
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November 13, 2017, 06:51:32 PM |
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devident
Member
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Activity: 152
Merit: 10
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November 13, 2017, 07:13:37 PM |
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Nice. I'm saving for our bearwhale. In fact I call dibs. I hope he has 100,000 coins and I hope he sets his price high and I hope his bearwhale head fits nicely above my fireplace.
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cryptonomicon25
Member
Offline
Activity: 460
Merit: 12
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November 13, 2017, 08:26:43 PM |
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How's the privacy in this coin?
Same as Bitcoin?
Not sure. I'd love to know the details of the algorithm, the level of privacy, what the actual bottleneck is with the mining (seems like its limited threads or l2 memory), and i'd like someone with more technical knowledge to do an in-depth assessment of all the github files. I guess when a bigger invest comes along they'll have the resources to answer all those questions. So far though the mining increases have been smooth and it hasn't quadrupled or anything like that, which maybe means the algorithm is difficult to "crack". In any case, that means most of us early miners are small guys and as long as that is true I'll keep mining. Can anyone tell me how much electricity they are using to mine this? It appears that processor cache will help you (as well as processor speed of course) but it appears there is arbitrary limiting after 3 threads. So to optimize you would get the fastest/most energy efficient processor for 3-4 threads. This means going over quadcore and likely going over 8mb cache would give diminishing returns. Yes, I've noticed this arbitrary limiting too after mining on three devices of varying power. If I mine cryptonight (for example) on my slow laptop processor I will get 60 h/s vs. 600 h/s on my Ryzen 7, or about a 10X increase. When I mine Yenten I get 250 h/s on the slow processor but only 1200 h/s on the Ryzen, only a 5X increase. So it does seem to be limited on purpose to keep the coin mineable on average computers.
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FacelessCrypto
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 539
Merit: 105
IDENA.IO - Proof-Of-Person Blockchain
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November 14, 2017, 02:24:50 PM |
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mine in pool.
I do mining in a pool, of course. I still 430 dreamers. I hope to increase the value. But after 6 months it may be zero) "I know a guy who pays all his bills in Yenten. He even pays his child support in Yenten." Oh .. what do you mean by that ? How much total hashpower your are putting in ? Whats your bet on this coin ?
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naskel
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November 14, 2017, 08:52:25 PM |
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nodes??I am unable to sync my wallet.Help.
addnode=95.43.223.158:9981 addnode=180.220.104.41:9981 addnode=130.255.12.2:9981 addnode=118.238.89.187:9981 addnode=120.75.87.120:9981 addnode=218.231.105.234:9981 addnode=85.0.41.222:9981 addnode=77.35.102.114:9981
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█▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀█ ░ .:: Free Pool @ http://pool.n-engine.com ::. ░ << *FREE* AS FREE BEER █▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄█
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tazmako
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 350
Merit: 100
XDNA - Most innovative cryptocurrency in 2018
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November 14, 2017, 11:08:58 PM |
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anyone can mine at crypto.n-engine.com?
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stevascha
Member
Offline
Activity: 312
Merit: 10
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November 15, 2017, 12:34:18 AM |
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How's the privacy in this coin?
Same as Bitcoin?
Not sure. I'd love to know the details of the algorithm, the level of privacy, what the actual bottleneck is with the mining (seems like its limited threads or l2 memory), and i'd like someone with more technical knowledge to do an in-depth assessment of all the github files. I guess when a bigger invest comes along they'll have the resources to answer all those questions. So far though the mining increases have been smooth and it hasn't quadrupled or anything like that, which maybe means the algorithm is difficult to "crack". In any case, that means most of us early miners are small guys and as long as that is true I'll keep mining. Can anyone tell me how much electricity they are using to mine this? It appears that processor cache will help you (as well as processor speed of course) but it appears there is arbitrary limiting after 3 threads. So to optimize you would get the fastest/most energy efficient processor for 3-4 threads. This means going over quadcore and likely going over 8mb cache would give diminishing returns. Yes, I've noticed this arbitrary limiting too after mining on three devices of varying power. If I mine cryptonight (for example) on my slow laptop processor I will get 60 h/s vs. 600 h/s on my Ryzen 7, or about a 10X increase. When I mine Yenten I get 250 h/s on the slow processor but only 1200 h/s on the Ryzen, only a 5X increase. So it does seem to be limited on purpose to keep the coin mineable on average computers. recently i have plan to update my ivybridge, usually get 600 h/s, should i invest new rig or ryzen 7?
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tazmako
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 350
Merit: 100
XDNA - Most innovative cryptocurrency in 2018
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November 15, 2017, 01:09:58 AM |
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How's the privacy in this coin?
Same as Bitcoin?
Not sure. I'd love to know the details of the algorithm, the level of privacy, what the actual bottleneck is with the mining (seems like its limited threads or l2 memory), and i'd like someone with more technical knowledge to do an in-depth assessment of all the github files. I guess when a bigger invest comes along they'll have the resources to answer all those questions. So far though the mining increases have been smooth and it hasn't quadrupled or anything like that, which maybe means the algorithm is difficult to "crack". In any case, that means most of us early miners are small guys and as long as that is true I'll keep mining. Can anyone tell me how much electricity they are using to mine this? It appears that processor cache will help you (as well as processor speed of course) but it appears there is arbitrary limiting after 3 threads. So to optimize you would get the fastest/most energy efficient processor for 3-4 threads. This means going over quadcore and likely going over 8mb cache would give diminishing returns. Yes, I've noticed this arbitrary limiting too after mining on three devices of varying power. If I mine cryptonight (for example) on my slow laptop processor I will get 60 h/s vs. 600 h/s on my Ryzen 7, or about a 10X increase. When I mine Yenten I get 250 h/s on the slow processor but only 1200 h/s on the Ryzen, only a 5X increase. So it does seem to be limited on purpose to keep the coin mineable on average computers. recently i have plan to update my ivybridge, usually get 600 h/s, should i invest new rig or ryzen 7? if you focus to mining by cpu ryzen is work [but i dont know about power use for ryzen7] im use intel gen6 skylake i7-6700@3.5G get 850 h/s
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stevascha
Member
Offline
Activity: 312
Merit: 10
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November 15, 2017, 02:17:33 AM |
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How's the privacy in this coin?
Same as Bitcoin?
Not sure. I'd love to know the details of the algorithm, the level of privacy, what the actual bottleneck is with the mining (seems like its limited threads or l2 memory), and i'd like someone with more technical knowledge to do an in-depth assessment of all the github files. I guess when a bigger invest comes along they'll have the resources to answer all those questions. So far though the mining increases have been smooth and it hasn't quadrupled or anything like that, which maybe means the algorithm is difficult to "crack". In any case, that means most of us early miners are small guys and as long as that is true I'll keep mining. Can anyone tell me how much electricity they are using to mine this? It appears that processor cache will help you (as well as processor speed of course) but it appears there is arbitrary limiting after 3 threads. So to optimize you would get the fastest/most energy efficient processor for 3-4 threads. This means going over quadcore and likely going over 8mb cache would give diminishing returns. Yes, I've noticed this arbitrary limiting too after mining on three devices of varying power. If I mine cryptonight (for example) on my slow laptop processor I will get 60 h/s vs. 600 h/s on my Ryzen 7, or about a 10X increase. When I mine Yenten I get 250 h/s on the slow processor but only 1200 h/s on the Ryzen, only a 5X increase. So it does seem to be limited on purpose to keep the coin mineable on average computers. recently i have plan to update my ivybridge, usually get 600 h/s, should i invest new rig or ryzen 7? if you focus to mining by cpu ryzen is work [but i dont know about power use for ryzen7] im use intel gen6 skylake i7-6700@3.5G get 850 h/s with my ivy, only difference 250 h/s i am curious, how much speed from ryzen 7?
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Adriano2010
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November 15, 2017, 02:24:07 AM |
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Is this coin worth to mining with a low-end Intel CPU 2,4 Ghz? If yes how many coins you get in 24 hours of mining?
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cryptonomicon25
Member
Offline
Activity: 460
Merit: 12
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November 15, 2017, 05:11:31 AM |
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How's the privacy in this coin?
Same as Bitcoin?
Not sure. I'd love to know the details of the algorithm, the level of privacy, what the actual bottleneck is with the mining (seems like its limited threads or l2 memory), and i'd like someone with more technical knowledge to do an in-depth assessment of all the github files. I guess when a bigger invest comes along they'll have the resources to answer all those questions. So far though the mining increases have been smooth and it hasn't quadrupled or anything like that, which maybe means the algorithm is difficult to "crack". In any case, that means most of us early miners are small guys and as long as that is true I'll keep mining. Can anyone tell me how much electricity they are using to mine this? It appears that processor cache will help you (as well as processor speed of course) but it appears there is arbitrary limiting after 3 threads. So to optimize you would get the fastest/most energy efficient processor for 3-4 threads. This means going over quadcore and likely going over 8mb cache would give diminishing returns. Yes, I've noticed this arbitrary limiting too after mining on three devices of varying power. If I mine cryptonight (for example) on my slow laptop processor I will get 60 h/s vs. 600 h/s on my Ryzen 7, or about a 10X increase. When I mine Yenten I get 250 h/s on the slow processor but only 1200 h/s on the Ryzen, only a 5X increase. So it does seem to be limited on purpose to keep the coin mineable on average computers. recently i have plan to update my ivybridge, usually get 600 h/s, should i invest new rig or ryzen 7? if you focus to mining by cpu ryzen is work [but i dont know about power use for ryzen7] im use intel gen6 skylake i7-6700@3.5G get 850 h/s with my ivy, only difference 250 h/s i am curious, how much speed from ryzen 7? It gets about 600 h/s stock, so there's no reason for you to upgrade to a Ryzen 7.
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joshwag
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 27
Merit: 0
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November 15, 2017, 05:21:19 AM |
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I have a 3770k @ 4.2ghz and get just under 800 hashes per second. set processor affinity to the odd numbered threads if you have hyper-threading on your chip
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crazyer1976
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Activity: 434
Merit: 19
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November 15, 2017, 05:30:18 AM |
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nodes??I am unable to sync my wallet.Help.
I have everything working. Sad that the price of the coin decreases (
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devident
Member
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Activity: 152
Merit: 10
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November 15, 2017, 06:04:54 AM |
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nodes??I am unable to sync my wallet.Help.
I have everything working. Sad that the price of the coin decreases ( Don't be sad. The price will drop all the way down to the cost of mining. A big miner with cheap aws access will mine it at 150 sat per coin and continue to flood the market with coins as low as 151 sat for a 1 sat profit, and if they can't sell it for 151 then they'll turn redirect their miners and difficulty will drop. So most of us are either mining it at a loss or buying it at a higher price than others can mine it at. Which is all fine because those big miners have their own competition with others who are dumping their stash asap before someone else crashes the price. Plus the more us little guys mine it unprofitably the more difficult it is for the big guys to make a profit. (miners continue to mine despite unprofitability) or (profitable miners don't sell their mined coins) = (price will rise) keep mining! Give the sellers something to regret. We'll have to absorb the 36k/day coins but tables will turn.
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EluosiWawa
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Activity: 96
Merit: 10
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November 15, 2017, 06:46:06 AM |
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Really promissing. Keep my eye on
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devident
Member
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Activity: 152
Merit: 10
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November 15, 2017, 06:49:32 AM |
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Really promissing. Keep my eye on
see look we even have this bot on our side. so promissing. it's like, the most promissing.
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crazyer1976
Member
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Activity: 434
Merit: 19
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November 15, 2017, 07:46:40 AM |
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Oh .. what do you mean by that ? How much total hashpower your are putting in ? Whats your bet on this coin ?
I mean that the developer has not provided a clear and promising descriptions of the future coins. Just mining for the sake of mining?) Simple cryptocurrency already abound on the market. The rise or fall depends more on fortune. I use about 1.5 khash sec. Hope the price is around 1000 Satoshi in a few months.
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stevascha
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Activity: 312
Merit: 10
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November 15, 2017, 08:10:01 AM |
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I have a 3770k @ 4.2ghz and get just under 800 hashes per second. set processor affinity to the odd numbered threads if you have hyper-threading on your chip how to set processor affinity? i dont know how to use hyperthreading technology
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joshwag
Newbie
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Activity: 27
Merit: 0
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November 15, 2017, 10:28:13 AM |
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open task manager, go to details, select the cpu miner, for an ivy bridge you should run cpuminer-aes-avx.exe, right click on the cpuminer-aes-avx.exe, and select set affinity. What processor do you have?
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stevascha
Member
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Activity: 312
Merit: 10
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November 15, 2017, 10:41:15 AM |
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open task manager, go to details, select the cpu miner, for an ivy bridge you should run cpuminer-aes-avx.exe, right click on the cpuminer-aes-avx.exe, and select set affinity. What processor do you have? i use 3570k, so we set affinity (all processors)?
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