satriani
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Activity: 93
Merit: 10
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October 24, 2013, 12:33:50 PM |
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can i set how much % of my CPU will be using in mining? i want to use only 50% of my CPU. is that possible ?
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muto
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October 24, 2013, 12:38:06 PM |
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You could limit the numbers of cores used to mine, but not the percent of CPU.
If you have a Quadcore, you can use 2 cores which is 50%.
setgenerate true 2
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satriani
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Activity: 93
Merit: 10
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October 24, 2013, 02:27:41 PM |
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You could limit the numbers of cores used to mine, but not the percent of CPU.
If you have a Quadcore, you can use 2 cores which is 50%.
setgenerate true 2
i have 8th . setgenerate true=2 or setgenerate=2 doesnt work still have 100% usage
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xyzzy099
Legendary
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Activity: 1065
Merit: 1077
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October 24, 2013, 02:34:43 PM |
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You could limit the numbers of cores used to mine, but not the percent of CPU.
If you have a Quadcore, you can use 2 cores which is 50%.
setgenerate true 2
i have 8th . setgenerate true=2 or setgenerate=2 doesnt work still have 100% usage If you are doing it from your .conf file, use "gen=1" and "genproclimit=2". If you are doing it from the debug window of the client, use "setgenerate true 2".
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Libertarians: Diligently plotting to take over the world and leave you alone.
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satriani
Member
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Activity: 93
Merit: 10
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October 24, 2013, 05:22:57 PM |
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where can i find some statistic how much XPM should i mine per month with Primespersec 1330 ?
second question: i install PrimeCoin from primecoin.org and then copy highperformance Prime to Program files/primecoin. did i do everything ok ?
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Sentinelrv
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October 24, 2013, 08:39:28 PM |
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Is there a transcript of the first interview somewhere?
Yes, there is a transcript at the following link on the forum, but you'll need to register first in order to see it... http://www.peercointalk.org/index.php?topic=617.0These interviews are mainly used for us to extract information from Sunny King so we can fill in the wiki.
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Sentinelrv
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October 24, 2013, 08:40:51 PM |
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Also, the 2nd interview should be starting in about 50 minutes on the PrimecoinTalk.org chat box. You need to register to be able to see it. It will NOT take place in IRC.
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arnuschky
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October 24, 2013, 09:49:29 PM |
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Is there a transcript of the first interview somewhere?
Yes, there is a transcript at the following link on the forum, but you'll need to register first in order to see it... http://www.peercointalk.org/index.php?topic=617.0These interviews are mainly used for us to extract information from Sunny King so we can fill in the wiki. Thanks, I'll wait for the full transcript then.
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Sentinelrv
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October 26, 2013, 01:42:31 AM |
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Thanks, I'll wait for the full transcript then. Here you go... http://ge.tt/61I4EDw/v/0Also, some people made it known to me that they wanted to volunteer to be on the Peercoin/Primecoin team, but they didn't finish filling out the survey to sign up because they didn't have any specific area of expertise. There was no job listed that they felt comfortable volunteering for. Because of this, we've set up a "General" category. If you don't have any specific area of expertise, but still want to volunteer and help out wherever you feel you can, try filling out the survey again and this time select the "General" category. Things are starting to move fast and we could sure use your help. The link to the survey is below. http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/J9RNLPHWe even have a position for something called the swarm. We'll post action items that need you to email an exchange or respond to forum threads or news articles to defend Peercoin/Primecoin. All you need for this is an understanding of how the coin works so that you can promote or defend it.
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mobile
Sr. Member
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Activity: 400
Merit: 250
the sun is shining, but the ice is still slippery
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October 26, 2013, 02:52:49 AM |
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Reserved.
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1 MoBi1eNbqh8QMuvtZjYzQGV8NEckJJYcT rep| GnuPG <3 CLAM <3
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smolen
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October 26, 2013, 01:36:12 PM |
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For the sake of search button! Could you post plain-text version here?
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Of course I gave you bad advice. Good one is way out of your price range.
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masterOfDisaster
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October 26, 2013, 02:58:30 PM |
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For the sake of search button! Could you post plain-text version here? ...until it may be integrated in the original post... Sunny King Community Interview 2 - Oct 24 2013 transcript link An interview regarding peercoin and lots more Sunny King [24|Oct 10:28 pm] : hi all JustaBitofTime [24|Oct 10:29 pm] : Hey Sunny, nice to have you with us. Are you ready to get started? Sunny King [24|Oct 10:29 pm] : yes John i m ready JustaBitofTime [24|Oct 10:30 pm] : Coolbeans94 wanted to know about Peercoin's long term approach, he asks "27. Is its design more for long - term security and sustainability? How does that relate to Bitcoin’s longterm vision?(Coolbeans94)" Sunny King [24|Oct 10:31 pm] : @Coolbeans 94. Both PPC and XPM are designed to last. PPC is designed with energy efficiency, XPM is designed with energy multiuse. Bitcoin has a long term uncertainty as to whether transaction fees can sustain good enough level of secu rity. Before that the main concern is how to balance transaction volume and transaction fee levels. Currently I get the feeling that bitcoin developers favor very low transaction fees and very high transaction volume, to be competitive against centralized systems (paypal, visa, mastercard etc) in terms of transaction volume, to the point of sacrificing decentralization. This also brings major uncertainties to bitcoin's future. Sunny King [24|Oct 10:32 pm] : @Coolbeans 94. From my point of view, I think the cryptocurrency movement needs at least one 'backbone' currency, or more, that maintains high degree of decentralization, maintains high level of security, but not nec essarily providing high volume of transactions. Thinking of savings accounts and gold coins, you don't transact them at high velocity but they form the backbone of the monetary systems. Sunny King [24|Oct 10:33 pm] : @Coolbeans 94. Pure proof - of - work systems such as bitcoin is not 100% suitable for this task. This is because transaction fee is not a reliable incentive to sustain network security. If the mining generati on amount is kept constant (there have been several such attempts in altcoins) it would work better security - wise but then it would also significantly weaken the scarcity property of the currency. XPM's inflation model is designed in such a way that it cou ld serve as backbone currency better than bitcoin if needed, because it could maintain high security reliably for longer, with reasonably good scarcity property as well. Of course that's only from architect's point of view, whether or not it would be chose n by the market is a whole different matter. JustaBitofTime [24|Oct 10:33 pm] : Along those lines the community wanted to know ""If the tax fees are to remain fixed at 0.01 and Peercoin becomes widely adopted, (Thus a sharp rise in value) the fees could become too much for microtransactions. What would happen in this case? What solutions do you imagine to get around the microtransaction issue?" Sunny King [24|Oct 10:35 pm] : @Coolbeans 94. PPC is designed to serve even better as a backbone currency. The proof - of - stake technology in PPC is not only energy efficient; it also maintains high level of security without relying on transaction fee. Thus PPC could be safely designed with strong scarcity property yet serving well as backbone currency. Sunny King [24|Oct 10:36 pm] : @Coolbeans 94. Both PPC and XPM use protocol enforced transaction fees, which reflects my preference that high transaction volume is discouraged in favor of serving as backbone currencies. JustaBitofTime [24|Oct 10:37 pm] : Speaking of security, there's often quite a bit of debate surrounding the PPC vs XPM ch eckpointing. 27.5 Will checkpoints be optional like they are in XPM in the next client version? Sunny King [24|Oct 10:38 pm] : @transaction fees: Right now if we are talking about micropayments in the US$1 range, both PPC and XPM still handle them with much lower overhead than credit card network. In the long term micropayments should be provided by centralized providers, or a less decentralized network optimized for h igh capacity transaction processing. Sunny King [24|Oct 10:38 pm] : @transaction fees: On the other hand there is no promise that minimum transaction fee wouldn't be adjusted. If processing capacity of personal computers continues to advance at the current pace, both max block size and minimum transaction fee could very well be adjusted at some point. However I do take a very cautious approach to adjust ing transaction fees, as opposed to bitcoin devs. The impact to the fitness of the currency as a backbone currency is of great concerns to me. Sunny King [24|Oct 10:4 0 pm] : [comment] no more characters allowed. please read the rest in the linked document ;) [/comment]
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arnuschky
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October 26, 2013, 03:26:16 PM |
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Thanks, I'll wait for the full transcript then. Here you go... thanks.
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porcupine87
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October 28, 2013, 03:22:56 PM |
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Hey guys, I have a few questions. I would be happy, if someone could answer me these. So I find Primecoin very intereseting. As far as I understand, the work of proof works as follows(I read the paper): I have to find a prime chain with a certain length (9.93 at the moment) and the prime origin has to be divied by the hash of the last block. So my question is: For me as miner wouldn't it be the easiest way to find chains of the length of 9.95 all the time and save them persisetent and then just buy a lot of RAM to put the list in there and then just test to find the right divident to the last hash? Wouldn't that be much faster than try to find new prime chains all the time? So then I tried it on block 200 000: http://primecoin.21stcenturymoneytalk.org/index.phpThe prime origin (decimal) is: 8714709782728338749181494073917835353396414535327396757824121441708798494550544 8916205980486400 The hash of block 199 999: 12600527268990194816109317079654455295674413904799950143178505281837028536927 But in the division, there is a remainder: http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=87147097827283387491814940739178353533964145353273967578241214417087984945505448916205980486400+divided+by+12600527268990194816109317079654455295674413904799950143178505281837028536927Thanks for help
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"Morality, it could be argued, represents the way that people would like the world to work - whereas economics represents how it actually does work." Freakonomics
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mustyoshi
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October 28, 2013, 03:54:00 PM |
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Since it's open source, if you believe that this is a better way to mine, you can go ahead and implement it. But keep in mind that when we hit dif 10 all 9 chains will become useless. So if I were you, I'd start producing 10 chains instead of 9 chains.
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jh00
Newbie
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Activity: 39
Merit: 0
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October 28, 2013, 04:07:38 PM |
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So I find Primecoin very intereseting. As far as I understand, the work of proof works as follows(I read the paper): I have to find a prime chain with a certain length (9.93 at the moment) and the prime origin has to be divied by the hash of the last block. So my question is: For me as miner wouldn't it be the easiest way to find chains of the length of 9.95 all the time and save them persisetent and then just buy a lot of RAM to put the list in there and then just test to find the right divident to the last hash? Wouldn't that be much faster than try to find new prime chains all the time?
In theory it works. In practice it will not be useful because you would need to generate at least 2^256 (or maybe 2^240 after heavy optimizations) header hashes to find one that is reusable. It works, but you won't be able to find a block this way in 10000 years.
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mikaelh
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October 28, 2013, 04:29:35 PM |
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It's not the hash of the previous block, it's the hash of the current block that needs to divide the prime origin. The hash of block 200 000 is: 0x4669276a932f5b16a718943a4930b5381bf9c7780ed45b2a751171d3feda174c = 31847690383992637018076344290348582925915863984630344106427592361057663457100 That hash divides the prime origin evenly.
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porcupine87
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October 28, 2013, 05:51:33 PM |
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So I find Primecoin very intereseting. As far as I understand, the work of proof works as follows(I read the paper): I have to find a prime chain with a certain length (9.93 at the moment) and the prime origin has to be divied by the hash of the last block. So my question is: For me as miner wouldn't it be the easiest way to find chains of the length of 9.95 all the time and save them persisetent and then just buy a lot of RAM to put the list in there and then just test to find the right divident to the last hash? Wouldn't that be much faster than try to find new prime chains all the time?
In theory it works. In practice it will not be useful because you would need to generate at least 2^256 (or maybe 2^240 after heavy optimizations) header hashes to find one that is reusable. It works, but you won't be able to find a block this way in 10000 years. No, I don't wanted to find a hash that matches. I wanted to find a lot of chains with the sufficient length and than just check, if there is prime origin of a chain that can be dividet by the given hash. Since it's open source, if you believe that this is a better way to mine, you can go ahead and implement it. No, I am sure I am not good enough in programming. I am just theoretical interested and pretty sure that there is a hitch in my approach. But if someone is deep in this subject and could point out in which files there is the mining algorithm I would be glad.
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"Morality, it could be argued, represents the way that people would like the world to work - whereas economics represents how it actually does work." Freakonomics
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