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roy7
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August 19, 2013, 11:18:25 PM |
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The announcement went out to the mailing list. Same info as discussed earlier in regards to price/speed.
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ASIC-K
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Hell?
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August 19, 2013, 11:30:28 PM |
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zedicus
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August 19, 2013, 11:37:50 PM |
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I think they made a typo on the price. If not i fell out my chair laughing and pointing for nothing.
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JohnyBigs
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August 19, 2013, 11:41:53 PM |
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I think they made a typo on the price. If not i fell out my chair laughing and pointing for nothing.
I also fell and died laughing haha. Fucking failures
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Minor Miner
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August 19, 2013, 11:44:40 PM |
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I think they made a typo on the price. If not i fell out my chair laughing and pointing for nothing.
No mistake except the price is in RMB and they put up US$ by mistake. Honest mistake likely because someone was setting the price based on costs and their costs were mostly in RMB too.
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NiteShdw
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August 19, 2013, 11:49:03 PM Last edit: August 20, 2013, 12:00:20 AM by NiteShdw |
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This is disappointing, I have been holding out specifically for CoinTerra.
I ran an ROI calculator, and if you assume that they deliver late in December, and that difficult continues to rise exponentially through December, the device will never coup its cost. It's amazing that a 2TH/s device at $16 won't be worth it. A few months ago that would have been an amazing device.
If you just look at how many bitcoins it'll be able to produce, it looks like it'll be able to generate about 110 BTC in the first 8 months. At current exchange rates the device will cost 145 BTC. The only way I can see this making any money is if the exchange rate for BTC doubles over the next 6 months.
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JohnyBigs
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August 20, 2013, 12:00:58 AM |
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I think they made a typo on the price. If not i fell out my chair laughing and pointing for nothing.
No mistake except the price is in RMB and they put up US$ by mistake. Honest mistake likely because someone was setting the price based on costs and their costs were mostly in RMB too. So what the price is not $17,000?? I guess your just trolling lol
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CoinHoarder
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August 20, 2013, 12:02:51 AM |
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I mostly agree with everyone else.
I was looking forward to this announcement, especially since they've been saying it will be the cheapest option, but it's kind of meh after running the numbers.
I can't expect they'll get much business at these prices, but it is what it is. It's hard for me to suggest Cointerra over BFL at this point considering BFL has actually released products before and both are about the same price. Sure, BFL has been a clusterfuck, but I would hope they have learned from their mistakes.
These ASIC companies need to leave some meat on the bone for their customers or there will be no customers.
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JohnyBigs
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August 20, 2013, 12:04:02 AM |
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I mostly agree with everyone else.
I was looking forward to this announcement, especially since they've been saying it will be the cheapest option, but it's kind of meh after running the numbers.
I can't expect they'll get much business at these prices, but it is what it is. It's hard for me to suggest Cointerra over BFL at this point considering BFL has actually released products before and both are about the same price. Sure, BFL has been a clusterfuck, but I would hope they have learned from their mistakes.
If they didn't learn from FPGA, I don't think they will ever learn. The best option is still KNC.
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CoinHoarder
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August 20, 2013, 12:04:38 AM |
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I mostly agree with everyone else.
I was looking forward to this announcement, especially since they've been saying it will be the cheapest option, but it's kind of meh after running the numbers.
I can't expect they'll get much business at these prices, but it is what it is. It's hard for me to suggest Cointerra over BFL at this point considering BFL has actually released products before and both are about the same price. Sure, BFL has been a clusterfuck, but I would hope they have learned from their mistakes.
If they didn't learn from FPGA, I don't think they will ever learn. The best option is still KNC. KNC at current prices won't ROI either..
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Bitcoinorama
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August 20, 2013, 12:06:38 AM |
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My issue is that you promised Paypal, yet have priced significantly higher than their $10,000 spending limit. Certainly they won't protect above that amount. So your statement about accepting Paypal, appears to have been ill-conceived, or untrue. What is PayPal's transaction limit?
You can send up to $10,000 in a single transaction.
If you don't have a PayPal account, you can send a one-time payment of up to $4,000.
If you don't have a PayPal account and live outside the U.S., the maximum amount you can send depends on your currency:
EUR - 8000 CAD - 12500 GBP - 5500 ARS - 30,000 AUD - 12500 BRL - 20,000 CHF - 13,000 CZK - 240,000 DKK - 60,000 HKD - 80,000 HUF - 2,000,000 ILS - 40,000 JPY - 1.000.000 MXN - 110,000 MYR - 40,000 NOK - 70,000 NZD - 15,000 PHP - 500,000 PLN - 32,000 SEK - 80,000 SGD - 16,000 THB - 360,000 TWD - 330,000
https://www.paypal.com/webapps/helpcenter/article/?solutionId=11637&m=SRE
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CoinHoarder
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August 20, 2013, 12:08:01 AM |
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They don't even accept Bitcoin..... lol Only bank transfers....
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JohnyBigs
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August 20, 2013, 12:17:50 AM |
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I mostly agree with everyone else.
I was looking forward to this announcement, especially since they've been saying it will be the cheapest option, but it's kind of meh after running the numbers.
I can't expect they'll get much business at these prices, but it is what it is. It's hard for me to suggest Cointerra over BFL at this point considering BFL has actually released products before and both are about the same price. Sure, BFL has been a clusterfuck, but I would hope they have learned from their mistakes.
If they didn't learn from FPGA, I don't think they will ever learn. The best option is still KNC. KNC at current prices won't ROI either.. uhh yes it will, if they don't delay of course.
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JohnyBigs
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August 20, 2013, 12:18:23 AM |
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They don't even accept Bitcoin..... lol Only bank transfers.... They said they'd accept PayPal : They aren't. They don't even accept btc. And worse of all, the thing will never pay for itself because it's overpriced: http://mining.thegenesisblock.com/a/294c1f0fabthese guys are a joke just let this thread die.
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CoinHoarder
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August 20, 2013, 12:30:06 AM |
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Also...
HashFast/xCrowd are offering a "Miner protection plan" of some sort. (If difficulty goes up so high that you can't ROI, they will provide extra chips for free... something along those lines.)
I'm a bit weary to order from a company that doesn't also provide this, because if they delay then you're out of luck.
I feel like a "Miner Protection Plan" is needed for any new start ups to be taken seriously.
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Bitcoinorama
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August 20, 2013, 12:47:36 AM |
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Also...
HashFast/xCrowd are offering a "Miner protection plan" of some sort. (If difficulty goes up so high that you can't ROI, they will provide extra chips for free... something along those lines.)
I'm a bit weary to order from a company that doesn't also provide this, because if they delay then you're out of luck.
I feel like a "Miner Protection Plan" is needed for any new start ups to be taken seriously.
Hashfast offer raw chips, but you have to pay for associated parts, assembly and shipping. Plus you'd presumably have to wait for such additionally hashing power to be made for you. This all negates any miner protection. Furthermore they guarantee refunds out of what, the pool of monies they have spent on development and wages? No third party assuming liability, no real protection. They couldn't pay you back if they wanted to, fact is, they have no intention to. X-Crowd offer protection on a global network of sub 350million in difficulty. By the time they deliver it will be almost certainly be beyond 350 million in difficulty, therefore such protection is also negated. It's just marketing. You either fall for it, or you don't. Cointerra looked promising as they promised to accept a secured payment with potential third party assuming liability to really protect their customers funds, but at this pricepoint there is no way they could have even genuinely considered Paypal as a payment choice.
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dan99
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August 20, 2013, 12:55:46 AM |
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Pretty expensive to say the least.
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CoinHoarder
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August 20, 2013, 12:55:57 AM |
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Also...
HashFast/xCrowd are offering a "Miner protection plan" of some sort. (If difficulty goes up so high that you can't ROI, they will provide extra chips for free... something along those lines.)
I'm a bit weary to order from a company that doesn't also provide this, because if they delay then you're out of luck.
I feel like a "Miner Protection Plan" is needed for any new start ups to be taken seriously.
Hashfast offer raw chips, but you have to pay for associated parts, assembly and shipping. Plus you'd presumably have to wait for such additionally hashing power to be made for you. This all negates any miner protection. Furthermore they guarantee refunds out of what, the pool of monies they have spent on development and wages? No third party assuming liability, no real protection. X-Crowd offer protection on a global network of sub 350million in difficulty. By the time they deliver it will be beyond 350 million in difficulty, therefore such protection is also negated. It's just marketing. You either fall for it, or you don't. Cointerra looked promising as they promised to accept a secured payment with potential third party assuming liability to really protect their customers funds, but at this pricepoint there is no way they could have even genuinely considered Paypal as a payment choice. I understand that the extra hashing power is only provided in chips (not assembled), but it is better than the NOTHING you would get from the other manufacturers if they are delayed and you won't make ROI, is it not? Obviously xCrowd's miner protection plan of difficulty <350 million is not really a miner protection plan. I did not know they had placed such a limit on the difficulty. HOWEVER, they also are offering escrow so I fail to see how a gap in their miner protection plan is really that big of a deal. HashFast's miner protection plan seems decent. In one case you are just screwed if they delay (KNC), and in the other case you can pay a little more to get the chips assembled and still make ROI (HashFast). I fail to see how not offering a miner protection plan is better than offering one... Try looking at the situation without your KNC is the only legit answer goggles on...
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Bitcoinorama
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August 20, 2013, 01:02:57 AM |
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Also...
HashFast/xCrowd are offering a "Miner protection plan" of some sort. (If difficulty goes up so high that you can't ROI, they will provide extra chips for free... something along those lines.)
I'm a bit weary to order from a company that doesn't also provide this, because if they delay then you're out of luck.
I feel like a "Miner Protection Plan" is needed for any new start ups to be taken seriously.
Hashfast offer raw chips, but you have to pay for associated parts, assembly and shipping. Plus you'd presumably have to wait for such additionally hashing power to be made for you. This all negates any miner protection. Furthermore they guarantee refunds out of what, the pool of monies they have spent on development and wages? No third party assuming liability, no real protection. X-Crowd offer protection on a global network of sub 350million in difficulty. By the time they deliver it will be beyond 350 million in difficulty, therefore such protection is also negated. It's just marketing. You either fall for it, or you don't. Cointerra looked promising as they promised to accept a secured payment with potential third party assuming liability to really protect their customers funds, but at this pricepoint there is no way they could have even genuinely considered Paypal as a payment choice. I understand that the extra hashing power is provided in chips not assembled. But, it is better than the NOTHING you would get from the other manufacturers if they are delayed and you won't make ROI, is it not? Obviously xCrowd's miner protection plan of difficulty <350 million is not really a miner protection plan. I did not know they had placed such a limit on the difficulty. However, HashFast's miner protection plan seems decent. In one case you are just screwed if they delay, and in the other case you can pay a little more to get the chips assembled and still make ROI. I fail to see how not offering a miner protection plan is better than not offering one... No if they are delayed because they lied about being able to raise funds, and secure fabrication at TSMC before October/November as promised, then as a customer when it dawns on me that a rocket run wasn't even feasible, I'd want my funds back in their entirey. Giving me an extra chip instead of the freedom of my own choice means nothing to me in the scheme of things. There is a reason they only give you a two week window to refund in January, and not before. There's a reason they keep refusing Paypal as a payment option when you would know inside of Paypal's 45 day protection plan whether Hashfast were capable of delivering as originally promised in October.
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Make my day! Say thanks if you found me helpful BTC Address ---> 1487ThaKjezGA6SiE8fvGcxbgJJu6XWtZp
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