Phinnaeus Gage
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Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
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August 18, 2013, 12:31:52 AM |
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Since this is our 2nd generation ASIC chip, we're free from the pitfalls sometimes associated with a first generation design. Testing systems, Bumping masks, Substrates & under fill engineering are all carryovers from our last version of the chip so they're ready for high volume production once the wafers are ready. The importance of this can't be overstated when considering schedule risk & reliability. Nevertheless, please do not purchase this product if you are unwilling to wait for the product to complete it's development. No bitchin' bitches. This negates having a manufactured 28nm device in hand.
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PuertoLibre
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August 18, 2013, 12:36:27 AM |
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This could be a good thing or a bad thing depending on whether BFL is actually insolvent right now or not.
They could have run out of money and are trying to fund old pre-orders with new pre-order money. If that's the case I see prison cells in BFL mangers' futures since it's a blatantly ponzi-esque tactic that will collapse in on itself eventually.
However think about the people who ordered after the price of BFL units doubled. They will likely never see a return on investment on their order anyway so switching to the new product queue and being at the head of that line actually makes a ton of sense for them. This only holds true as long as BFL has enough money to stay afloat without dipping into future pre-order money to fund old pre-orders' production though.
With their history though I would certainly never pay for a pre-order in Bitcoin. For a product in hand that other people have recieved from a seller with no problem Bitcoin works great, but for a pre-order the lack of protection for buyers is very worrying.
You know this means that suckers that actually believe this new development are going to want to resell their current BFL hardware to make money to enter the newer queue. So underbid every single one of them. Lets drive the cost of BFL hardware into the floor so we can get it cheap as chips.
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k9quaint
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August 18, 2013, 12:39:30 AM |
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From the BFL website: Plus Due to double node jump, the max power should be 0.77W/GH (3.1W/GH divided by 4). Based on everything we know from any chip industry (FPGA, CPU, GPU, etc), that should be the ceiling in power-consumption.
Regards, Nasser
Picture says 600 GH/s @ 350W. BFL "engineer" (who's area of expertise is Visual Basic and .NET) says 0.77W per GH/s Unfortunately, multiplication says 600 GH/s * 0.77W per GH/s = 462W Based on everything we know about multiplication (FPGA, CPU, GPU. etc) that should mean you are just as good at guessing TDP in August of 2013 as you were in August of 2012.
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Bitcoin is backed by the full faith and credit of YouTube comments.
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BFL-Engineer
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August 18, 2013, 12:44:03 AM |
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From the BFL website: Plus Due to double node jump, the max power should be 0.77W/GH (3.1W/GH divided by 4). Based on everything we know from any chip industry (FPGA, CPU, GPU, etc), that should be the ceiling in power-consumption.
Regards, Nasser
Picture says 600 GH/s @ 350W. BFL "engineer" (who's area of expertise is Visual Basic and .NET) says 0.77W per GH/s Unfortunately, multiplication says 600 GH/s * 0.77W per GH/s = 462W Based on everything we know about multiplication (FPGA, CPU, GPU. etc) that should mean you are just as good at guessing TDP in August of 2013 as you were in August of 2012. If you read carefully, it's noted that 0.77W/GH would be ceiling due to node jump, not taking any optimization or correction into consideration. The actual numbers are lower, and the ~0.6W/GH was number we decided that was closest to reality + error margin. Regards, Nasser
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k9quaint
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August 18, 2013, 12:47:52 AM |
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From the BFL website: Plus Due to double node jump, the max power should be 0.77W/GH (3.1W/GH divided by 4). Based on everything we know from any chip industry (FPGA, CPU, GPU, etc), that should be the ceiling in power-consumption.
Regards, Nasser
Picture says 600 GH/s @ 350W. BFL "engineer" (who's area of expertise is Visual Basic and .NET) says 0.77W per GH/s Unfortunately, multiplication says 600 GH/s * 0.77W per GH/s = 462W Based on everything we know about multiplication (FPGA, CPU, GPU. etc) that should mean you are just as good at guessing TDP in August of 2013 as you were in August of 2012. If you read carefully, it's noted that 0.77W/GH would be ceiling due to node jump, not taking any optimization or correction into consideration. The actual numbers are lower, and the ~0.6W/GH was number we decided that was closest to reality + error margin. Regards, Nasser Decided by whom?
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Bitcoin is backed by the full faith and credit of YouTube comments.
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J35st3r
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August 18, 2013, 12:48:24 AM |
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The actual numbers are lower, and the ~0.6W/GH was number we decided that was closest to reality + error margin.
Was that in the board meeting where you decided to overlook all those nasty complicated calculations and instead chose the numbers that fitted the maximum TDP of the PCI-E card you had in mind from your marketing guys?
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1Jest66T6Jw1gSVpvYpYLXR6qgnch6QYU1 NumberOfTheBeast ... go on, give it a try
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YipYip
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August 18, 2013, 12:49:23 AM |
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From the BFL website: Plus Due to double node jump, the max power should be 0.77W/GH (3.1W/GH divided by 4). Based on everything we know from any chip industry (FPGA, CPU, GPU, etc), that should be the ceiling in power-consumption.
Regards, Nasser
Picture says 600 GH/s @ 350W. BFL "engineer" (who's area of expertise is Visual Basic and .NET) says 0.77W per GH/s Unfortunately, multiplication says 600 GH/s * 0.77W per GH/s = 462W Based on everything we know about multiplication (FPGA, CPU, GPU. etc) that should mean you are just as good at guessing TDP in August of 2013 as you were in August of 2012. If you read carefully, it's noted that 0.77W/GH would be ceiling due to node jump, not taking any optimization or correction into consideration. The actual numbers are lower, and the ~0.6W/GH was number we decided that was closest to reality + error margin. Regards, Nasser 1) How are you going to get 400+ watts into 1 card 4 x Pcie connectors 2) You would no be able to disapate the heat that 400 watts would generate for a single fan reference design 3) Your VB.NET power estimates where out by ~ 40% what happened in the last 6 months Finally 4 how can u as a human be associated with this total joke of a company whose professionalism is NON EXISTANT if not criminal in nature !
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OBJECT NOT FOUND
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Cablez
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I owe my soul to the Bitcoin code...
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August 18, 2013, 12:50:35 AM |
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If you read carefully, it's noted that 0.77W/GH would be ceiling due to node jump, not taking any optimization or correction into consideration. The actual numbers are lower, and the ~0.6W/GH was number we decided that was closest to reality + error margin. Regards, Nasser
How do you have actual numbers for something that will not exist for months? Its just a thought experiment. Please try to use BFL-speak, you have pre-orders on the line.
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Tired of substandard power distribution in your ASIC setup??? Chris' Custom Cablez will get you sorted out right! No job too hard so PM me for a quote Check my products or ask a question here: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=74397.0
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Ytterbium
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August 18, 2013, 12:51:16 AM |
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If you read carefully, it's noted that 0.77W/GH would be ceiling due to node jump, not taking any optimization or correction into consideration. The actual numbers are lower, and the ~0.6W/GH was number we decided that was closest to reality + error margin. Regards, Nasser
What is the load capacitance and beta values for the transistors in the process your using? What's the V tn?
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millsdmb
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August 18, 2013, 12:51:36 AM |
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From the BFL website: Plus Due to double node jump, the max power should be 0.77W/GH (3.1W/GH divided by 4). Based on everything we know from any chip industry (FPGA, CPU, GPU, etc), that should be the ceiling in power-consumption.
Regards, Nasser
Picture says 600 GH/s @ 350W. BFL "engineer" (who's area of expertise is Visual Basic and .NET) says 0.77W per GH/s Unfortunately, multiplication says 600 GH/s * 0.77W per GH/s = 462W Based on everything we know about multiplication (FPGA, CPU, GPU. etc) that should mean you are just as good at guessing TDP in August of 2013 as you were in August of 2012. If you read carefully, it's noted that 0.77W/GH would be ceiling due to node jump, not taking any optimization or correction into consideration. The actual numbers are lower, and the ~0.6W/GH was number we decided that was closest to reality + error margin. Regards, Nasser 1) How are you going to get 400+ watts into 1 card 4 x Pcie connectors 2) You would no be able to disapate the heat that 400 watts would generate for a single fan reference design 3) Your VB.NET power estimates where out by ~ 40% what happened in the last 6 months Finally 4 how can u as a human be associated with this total joke of a company whose professionalism is NON EXISTANT if not criminal in nature ! 5) why are you mysteriously on duty on a saturday night, is this an official launch or a leak?
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mrb
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August 18, 2013, 12:52:13 AM |
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Due to double node jump, the max power should be 0.77W/GH (3.1W/GH divided by 4). Based on everything we know from any chip industry (FPGA, CPU, GPU, etc), that should be the ceiling in power-consumption.
Hi Nasser, Brave of you to dive into the BCT feeding frenzy! I'm curious about your numbers - 0.77 * 600 = 462W - how come it says 350W on the website? What he is saying is that just the theoretical power efficiency increase alone gained from 55nm to 28nm should guarantee 0.77 W/GH. But he also said they improved the design (maybe fewer transistors, a "sea-of-hasher" design like bitfury, etc), therefore it should be even lower than 0.77 W/GH.
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aoshea
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August 18, 2013, 12:53:31 AM |
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I sell Bhut Jolokia "Ghost" Chili seeds and other hot pepper seeds for BTC. PM me for details.
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RoadStress
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August 18, 2013, 12:53:55 AM |
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Regarding power consumption, Radeon 5970 and 5870 both consume more power than our card does, the very reason we took this design approach.
Yeah, but what about when the power doubles from your pre-fab estimates, like every other chip you've built? Due to double node jump, the max power should be 0.77W/GH (3.1W/GH divided by 4). Based on everything we know from any chip industry (FPGA, CPU, GPU, etc), that should be the ceiling in power-consumption. Regards, Nasser What were your power estimates for the your current ASIC chips?
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YipYip
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August 18, 2013, 12:55:04 AM |
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No We want exact answers to our resonable questions ...I.E some form of proof
WHat is the vtn ?
Not Just "IT GO BETTER" ...or "TRUST ME I KNOW WHAT I AM TALKING ABOUT"
because on all fronts this has been proven to be false !
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YipYip
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August 18, 2013, 12:56:31 AM |
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Once again FUCKING CRICKETS !!
You know its BFL when they wont answer simple questions !!
Let me guess the Vtn value is unknown as you are not the mythical French Bank employee /ASIC chief engineer
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OBJECT NOT FOUND
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k9quaint
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Activity: 1190
Merit: 1000
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August 18, 2013, 12:58:17 AM |
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If you read carefully, it's noted that 0.77W/GH would be ceiling due to node jump, not taking any optimization or correction into consideration. The actual numbers are lower, and the ~0.6W/GH was number we decided that was closest to reality + error margin. Regards, Nasser
How do you have actual numbers for something that will not exist for months? Its just a thought experiment. Please try to use BFL-speak, you have pre-orders on the line. These actual numbers come from a guy with the skill set of "account management", "sales management", "product management", "solution selling", "new business development", "windows", "product marketing", "Microsoft excel", 2 years of writing Visual Basic and a degree in Telecommunications Engineering from the Islamic Azad University in Tehran. You might need this to interpret them correctly: Anyone want to start a pool on the day he starts calling everyone douchebags and trolls?
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Bitcoin is backed by the full faith and credit of YouTube comments.
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Beans
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August 18, 2013, 01:00:00 AM |
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From the BFL website: Plus Due to double node jump, the max power should be 0.77W/GH (3.1W/GH divided by 4). Based on everything we know from any chip industry (FPGA, CPU, GPU, etc), that should be the ceiling in power-consumption.
Regards, Nasser
Picture says 600 GH/s @ 350W. BFL "engineer" (who's area of expertise is Visual Basic and .NET) says 0.77W per GH/s Unfortunately, multiplication says 600 GH/s * 0.77W per GH/s = 462W Based on everything we know about multiplication (FPGA, CPU, GPU. etc) that should mean you are just as good at guessing TDP in August of 2013 as you were in August of 2012. If you read carefully, it's noted that 0.77W/GH would be ceiling due to node jump, not taking any optimization or correction into consideration. The actual numbers are lower, and the ~0.6W/GH was number we decided that was closest to reality + error margin. Regards, Nasser 1) How are you going to get 400+ watts into 1 card 4 x Pcie connectors 2) You would no be able to disapate the heat that 400 watts would generate for a single fan reference design 3) Your VB.NET power estimates where out by ~ 40% what happened in the last 6 months Finally 4 how can u as a human be associated with this total joke of a company whose professionalism is NON EXISTANT if not criminal in nature ! Reference style fans work the best by far. You could cool a 400 watt card, depending on how the heat was spread out. A 6990 is about the same. They should be able to make a water block for these pretty easily though. Seems more likely that the card will not run at 400watts. When is the last time they hit the mark guessing wattage?
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Phinnaeus Gage
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Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
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August 18, 2013, 01:00:59 AM |
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This is hilarious... I actually have some BFL hardware and even I think this means they are finished.. They are obviously trying to move payments to a medium that cant be refunded (bitcoin or wire xfer). They are using a design which alot of us *know* cannot dissipate that much heat, and they are moving at a snail's pace with current orders.
Guys... Ive never said this before, but i believe they are on the virge of folding and taking anyone who preorders money with them..
Regarding power consumption, Radeon 6990 both consume more power than our card does, the very reason we took this design approach. Regards, Nasser EDIT: Corrected '5970' and '5870' to 6990 Simple mistake for a Persian engineer to make late at night in France on a Saturday.
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millsdmb
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August 18, 2013, 01:02:17 AM |
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Simple mistake for a Persian engineer to make late at night in France on a Saturday.
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xzempt
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August 18, 2013, 01:02:25 AM |
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BFL will make headlines soon... Joining the ranks of pirateat40
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