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Author Topic: Samsung confirms they’re developing ASIC’s  (Read 1571 times)
philipma1957
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May 20, 2018, 10:15:48 PM
Last edit: May 22, 2018, 01:04:49 AM by frodocooper
 #21

As an example - Antminer's Scrypt router (R4?) - which has never earned even close enough to pay for it's cost premium over other devices with no mining in them that have similar performance, much less it's total cost, and at THIS point I think it might be underwater on cost of running the mining chip vs income unless you have FREE electric.

that is because they seriously overcharged for it

the t1 chip which samsung built for  halong/inno_silicon

does 16000 gh pushed in a dragonmint

it does 13500 gh at a relaxed speed.

That chip cost under 5 bucks.
Based on 192 x 5 = 960 and black fri price was 1500 for gear

A Samsung smart tv 50 inch costs 749

It has internet
It has a cpu

So a pcb with the chip and a heat sink is cheap under 10

Maybe they bump price to 800

And it mines 70gh using 7 watts.

Does it ever earn 50 bucks . It does not matter as this is a way to put blockchain in the hands of Sony Samsung LG etc.

I see this happening based on 1.4 billion tvs sold worldwide since 2011

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May 21, 2018, 06:01:07 PM
 #22

With the news that a Japanese GMO is releasing the 7nm chip for mining to the public

Is it even real? That was announced over 6 months ago. If you've watched ASIC prices amongst all current manufacturers over the past couple months, I believe you can see Bitmain trying to control their monopoly through price manipulation. They have slashed their S9 prices by roughly $1500/unit. This forces all competitors to sell cheaper to stay in the game, which Canaan has followed. Prior to Bitmain's price manipulation, Whatsminer M3 units were the cheapest and quickest ROI. They have not changed their pricing much at all. They'll probably be out of business unless they produce something new because only a fool would pay the same price for something that hashes slower and uses almost double the power.

This may mean that supply is high and demand is low and that they are all trying to get rid of as many units as possible because they already have more efficient chips, or it's just Bitmain trying to put competition out of business. S9 is two year old technology on 16nm chips. Samsung's chip is 10nm and Halong had the chips in August 2017. I'd bet on Bitmain and/or Canaan having better chips that they just aren't releasing to the public yet. They need to capitalize as much as possible on old tech or until a competitor releases something better. Until then, they will continue to maximize profits. The Samsung chips are a bit of a let down. If the specs were legit without ASIC Boost, then they'd be some real competition.

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May 21, 2018, 06:15:57 PM
Last edit: May 22, 2018, 01:06:24 AM by frodocooper
 #23

Is it even real? That was announced over 6 months ago. If you've watched ASIC prices amongst all current manufacturers over the past couple months, I believe you can see Bitmain trying to control their monopoly through price manipulation. They have slashed their S9 prices by roughly $1500/unit. This forces all competitors to sell cheaper to stay in the game, which Canaan has followed. Prior to Bitmain's price manipulation, Whatsminer M3 units were the cheapest and quickest ROI. They have not changed their pricing much at all. They'll probably be out of business unless they produce something new because only a fool would pay the same price for something that hashes slower and uses almost double the power.

This may mean that supply is high and demand is low and that they are all trying to get rid of as many units as possible because they already have more efficient chips, or it's just Bitmain trying to put competition out of business. S9 is two year old technology on 16nm chips. Samsung's chip is 10nm and Halong had the chips in August 2017. I'd bet on Bitmain and/or Canaan having better chips that they just aren't releasing to the public yet. They need to capitalize as much as possible on old tech or until a competitor releases something better. Until then, they will continue to maximize profits. The Samsung chips are a bit of a let down. If the specs were legit without ASIC Boost, then they'd be some real competition.

Yet another person with no clue how the industry works and is ascribing malicious intent to a standard business practice.

Bitmain and the other mining manufacturers price their machines based on ROI and market conditions. The prices are low because the price of bitcoin has been suppressed for a while now. It has nothing to do with market manipulation.

P.S. The whatsminers have always been garbage. A 2200w 28nm miner? When was it ever the quickest ROI? Who would be dumb enough to buy that 4+ year old tech?

Stop buying industrial miners, running them at home, and then complaining about the noise.
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May 21, 2018, 08:21:38 PM
Last edit: May 21, 2018, 08:36:34 PM by mgoz
 #24

Yet another person with no clue how the industry works and is ascribing malicious intent to a standard business practice.

Bitmain and the other mining manufacturers price their machines based on ROI and market conditions. The prices are low because the price of bitcoin has been suppressed for a while now. It has nothing to do with market manipulation.

P.S. The whatsminers have always been garbage. A 2200w 28nm miner? When was it ever the quickest ROI? Who would be dumb enough to buy that 4+ year old tech?

I've been mining since 2010, but it's cool. This is the speculation forum. If Bitmain's pricing was based solely on ROI and market conditions, then they would have slashed prices back in February. At that time, S9 w/PSU was going for $2500. Pangolinminer relaunch of M3 w/PSU was going for $1k. If you dropped $50k back then, you'd have more than double the total hash rate with M3 for same investment and ROI in under a year at current price/difficulty with $0.05 kWh electric. At a year, S9 would be $10k short. Canaan didn't change their pricing until Bitmain did. Follow the leader. When they are already trying to manipulate BCH price, why wouldn't they also try to manipulate ASIC market?
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May 22, 2018, 03:27:53 PM
Last edit: May 23, 2018, 01:08:24 AM by frodocooper
 #25

How can I be so sure? I do believe I'm qualified to make that judgement.

Because one mining chip provides pitiful amounts of mining and a lot more consumes far too much power for a generic consumer device. Power consumption is a huge part of a consumer device. Many chips require ridiculous amounts of cooling and TVs and other consumer devices do not usually have any significant amount of cooling; a few heatsinks and maybe one small fan at most. The one chip pitiful amount is seriously not even worth a few satoshi of mining and there is no "generic way" to mine. All mining happens at pools and even at pools one chip won't provide enough to get a payout even once per year. Samsung isn't going to start running their own mining pools to allow people to earn dust amounts of mining that they can never actually redeem, nor will they waste effort and time developing their own chip for such a futile exercise. Samsung will happily press chips for other morons because that's what their chip foundry is designed to do. They don't care what crap designs they get given, they just have to press them at ever decreasing sizes for ever increasing costs to get their money.

Forget it, the equation doesn't work.

CK is right however there could still be sneaky ways they or others can hide a discreet low powered low level component based miner that mines while the consumer device is powered. This would hash at a super slow rate however when you do the bigger picture overview and realize maybe its about numbers and for example lets say they produce 20k TV sets with this discreet miner secretly within the design it adds profits to the manufacturers and integrators as such never the consumer. Now this would eventually lead to heavy legal issues if discovered such as class action lawsuits but thats a whole other topic... Fact is real mining requires like CK said lots of power and ventilation more so then one can pack into a modern flat TV set. But it goes to say if they really wanted to add a miner it would be a discreet low powered alternative if anything...

just my 2 cents

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May 22, 2018, 08:58:52 PM
 #26

CK is right however there could still be sneaky ways they or others can hide a discreet low powered low level component based miner that mines while the consumer device is powered. This would hash at a super slow rate however when you do the bigger picture overview and realize maybe its about numbers and for example lets say they produce 20k TV sets with this discreet miner secretly within the design it adds profits to the manufacturers and integrators as such never the consumer. Now this would eventually lead to heavy legal issues if discovered such as class action lawsuits but thats a whole other topic... Fact is real mining requires like CK said lots of power and ventilation more so then one can pack into a modern flat TV set. But it goes to say if they really wanted to add a miner it would be a discreet low powered alternative if anything...

just my 2 cents
Even then people keep ignoring the pooled mining aspect I mentioned. Are you all assuming these will be mining solo - A consumer device couldn't support a full mining node and would need lots of bandwidth so that's not an option. Where would they point their hashrate? Would Samsung really start running a mining pool? Do you really think a company the size of Samsung would mine in secret and risk massive backlash when the profit margins DON'T WORK?

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May 22, 2018, 10:42:37 PM
Last edit: May 23, 2018, 02:02:37 PM by NotFuzzyWarm
 #27

AFAIK in 2014 in the US the FTC went after a PC maker for a selling PC that was also mining in the background. Someone like eMachines or Peoples PC with the mining being done to (in theory) lower the price of the machine or rental contract for it. Point is, even though the Fine Print made mention of the mining aspect the company was still forced to stop and paid a very hefty fine of several million $. I do believe that particular case is why none of the space heater makers have done the obvious thing that could work as long as they make it crystal clear what the miner/heater is doing and provide the associated info on how to get a wallet, where to point the miner/heater at, etc.

Then again, remember VCR's and how most folk's were blinking 12:00 all the time?..... Perhaps to deal with the technology-challenged everyday person, as a default have the miner/heaters mine for a charity wallet like Shriners or whatever is regional to the miners.

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May 28, 2018, 09:38:01 PM
 #28

AFAIK in 2014 in the US the FTC went after a PC maker for a selling PC that was also mining in the background. Someone like eMachines or Peoples PC with the mining being done to (in theory) lower the price of the machine or rental contract for it. Point is, even though the Fine Print made mention of the mining aspect the company was still forced to stop and paid a very hefty fine of several million $. I do believe that particular case is why none of the space heater makers have done the obvious thing that could work as long as they make it crystal clear what the miner/heater is doing and provide the associated info on how to get a wallet, where to point the miner/heater at, etc.

Then again, remember VCR's and how most folk's were blinking 12:00 all the time?..... Perhaps to deal with the technology-challenged everyday person, as a default have the miner/heaters mine for a charity wallet like Shriners or whatever is regional to the miners.

Could also use warranty registration as a means to set up pay outs for end users.

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