TanteStefana2
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March 07, 2016, 12:24:26 AM |
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EDIT: Well, apparently ASICs are a good thing!
I`m not in favor of them. I`m surprised the change from DRK to DASH caused more uproar than this fundamental change. I thought ASIC resistance was a given feature with DASH. Yes, it was ASIC resistance. Even from the very beginning Evan said he was hoping for 2 years without ASICs and strangely enough, that just what he got. This is because the network needed to be strong enough for the change over, which it is. This was not unforeseen. ASICs do strengthen the security of the network. They do this by making it so much harder to mess with transactions via someone having the ability to double the hash between blocks, changing transactions, and getting the longest chain. This could actually happen with a massively successful botnet that is kept idle except when needed, reducing the chance of people discovering the infection, increasing the spread of the bot and being able to control a ton of hash power for short periods of time. And this is because only a very few of the world's computers are hashing, most people don't even know about crypto currencies, but they all have graphics cards that can be hijacked. ASICs are usually not kept idle and thus, their high hash power would be very difficult, thousands of times harder, to double or triple. This makes the network more secure. Anyway, Evan Duffield, our lead developer has said he and the team have come up with a potential solution that he will reveal soon. Hopefully it'll pan out and we'll hear from him soon. One thing you can say about Dash, is that change is not something Dash fears. Dash rolls with the changes (thanks RUSH)
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Another proud lifetime Dash Foundation member My TanteStefana account was hacked, Beware trading "You'll never reach your destination if you stop to throw stones at every dog that barks."Sir Winston Churchill BTC: 12pu5nMDPEyUGu3HTbnUB5zY5RG65EQE5d
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xxxgoodgirls
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March 07, 2016, 01:04:17 AM |
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Is anyone running the MN from a raspberry pi? Won't it get eventually overharmed for being turned on 24/7?
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Minotaur26
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March 07, 2016, 01:09:08 AM |
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EDIT: Well, apparently ASICs are a good thing!
I`m not in favor of them. I`m surprised the change from DRK to DASH caused more uproar than this fundamental change. I thought ASIC resistance was a given feature with DASH. I think is important to be clear that the Dash project is not in favor of ASIC mining centralization either. Having said that, just changing the algorithm is not really a long term solution either as they could just develop ASICs for the new algorithm. Also the issue is not intrinsically ASICS but the centralization that unfair cost advantages on certain locations produce. If everyone had competitive ASICs and electricity costs around the world it would not be an issue either. So we are working on a potential solution to the centralization issue that does not necessarily include changing algorithms. Is in research and it may not turn out as expected but we are aware of the issue. This was part of the latest official announcement by Evan: Another very important point to make about the Satoshi Roundtable was the very large issue with mining centralization in the Bitcoin space. When Satoshi originally invented Bitcoin, he did not anticipate the excessive mining centralization that has become a dominant force in the Bitcoin space. Due to this, we now have a small group of people that literally control the protocol consensus and their short term interests may be in conflict with the long term interests of other stakeholders, industry, users, etc. We definitely do not want our ecosystem to follow the same failed course and we definitely would have under the pooled ASIC mining paradigm. This is mainly because there are differences in efficiency that a miner can gain depending on where they live, which can give a huge advantage when their higher investment returns are compounded. Efficiencies such as cheaper labor, cheap or free electricity and even withholding newer advanced ASICs for their own mining operations, then selling them after they become less effective. After many iterations of these phenomenon in BTC we have come to a situation where the ones who have access to these advantages effectively control Bitcoin.
After hours of discussions, we believe we have found the solution to the unfair mining advantages that produce centralization around certain jurisdictions that control the production of ASICS. We will be releasing much more information about this soon, but are feverishly working on this project for v12.1. We’re going to be releasing much more information about this in the coming weeks; it’s going to be a giant advantage for the Dash project.
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volyova
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March 07, 2016, 01:10:37 AM |
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EDIT: Well, apparently ASICs are a good thing!
I`m not in favor of them. I`m surprised the change from DRK to DASH caused more uproar than this fundamental change. I thought ASIC resistance was a given feature with DASH. Yes, it was ASIC resistance. Even from the very beginning Evan said he was hoping for 2 years without ASICs and strangely enough, that just what he got. This is because the network needed to be strong enough for the change over, which it is. This was not unforeseen. ASICs do strengthen the security of the network. They do this by making it so much harder to mess with transactions via someone having the ability to double the hash between blocks, changing transactions, and getting the longest chain. This could actually happen with a massively successful botnet that is kept idle except when needed, reducing the chance of people discovering the infection, increasing the spread of the bot and being able to control a ton of hash power for short periods of time. And this is because only a very few of the world's computers are hashing, most people don't even know about crypto currencies, but they all have graphics cards that can be hijacked. ASICs are usually not kept idle and thus, their high hash power would be very difficult, thousands of times harder, to double or triple. This makes the network more secure. Anyway, Evan Duffield, our lead developer has said he and the team have come up with a potential solution that he will reveal soon. Hopefully it'll pan out and we'll hear from him soon. One thing you can say about Dash, is that change is not something Dash fears. Dash rolls with the changes (thanks RUSH) Very noble and inspiring, I'm sure. But if you'd studied the real effects of ASICs on small and isolated networks, you wouldn't be so blase.
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Riseman
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March 07, 2016, 01:41:14 AM |
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Is anyone running the MN from a raspberry pi? Won't it get eventually overharmed for being turned on 24/7?
I don't but the thing is actually built for 24/7 operation.
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TanteStefana2
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March 07, 2016, 02:00:00 AM |
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Is anyone running the MN from a raspberry pi? Won't it get eventually overharmed for being turned on 24/7?
I don't but the thing is actually built for 24/7 operation. I believe Mangled Blue is running one
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Another proud lifetime Dash Foundation member My TanteStefana account was hacked, Beware trading "You'll never reach your destination if you stop to throw stones at every dog that barks."Sir Winston Churchill BTC: 12pu5nMDPEyUGu3HTbnUB5zY5RG65EQE5d
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tungfa
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March 07, 2016, 03:20:43 AM |
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fuzzyduck
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March 07, 2016, 06:51:45 AM |
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Is anyone running the MN from a raspberry pi? Won't it get eventually overharmed for being turned on 24/7?
I'm running one for over a year now. 24/7. Still the same SD card without corruption.
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AforAmethyst
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March 07, 2016, 08:26:45 AM |
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Is anyone running the MN from a raspberry pi? Won't it get eventually overharmed for being turned on 24/7?
I'm running one for over a year now. 24/7. Still the same SD card without corruption. What's the spec of the SD card you are using? I tried running Linux off a USB flash drive a couple of years ago and after a while it failed. I think it had something to do with flash drives (and SD cards?) having limited rewriting capabilities. Your SD card sounds durable. 24/7 over a year is not bad.
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semajjames
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March 07, 2016, 11:45:48 AM |
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EDIT: Well, apparently ASICs are a good thing!
I`m not in favor of them. I`m surprised the change from DRK to DASH caused more uproar than this fundamental change. I thought ASIC resistance was a given feature with DASH. Yes, it was ASIC resistance. Even from the very beginning Evan said he was hoping for 2 years without ASICs and strangely enough, that just what he got. This is because the network needed to be strong enough for the change over, which it is. This was not unforeseen. ASICs do strengthen the security of the network. They do this by making it so much harder to mess with transactions via someone having the ability to double the hash between blocks, changing transactions, and getting the longest chain. This could actually happen with a massively successful botnet that is kept idle except when needed, reducing the chance of people discovering the infection, increasing the spread of the bot and being able to control a ton of hash power for short periods of time. And this is because only a very few of the world's computers are hashing, most people don't even know about crypto currencies, but they all have graphics cards that can be hijacked. ASICs are usually not kept idle and thus, their high hash power would be very difficult, thousands of times harder, to double or triple. This makes the network more secure. Anyway, Evan Duffield, our lead developer has said he and the team have come up with a potential solution that he will reveal soon. Hopefully it'll pan out and we'll hear from him soon. One thing you can say about Dash, is that change is not something Dash fears. Dash rolls with the changes (thanks RUSH) Very noble and inspiring, I'm sure. But if you'd studied the real effects of ASICs on small and isolated networks, you wouldn't be so blase. ASICs have been in now for a couple weeks and GPU farms running on high powered kernels have been in for months and months if anything DASH network hash rate has gone down ,,, what is the issue
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TanteStefana2
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March 07, 2016, 01:35:59 PM |
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EDIT: Well, apparently ASICs are a good thing!
I`m not in favor of them. I`m surprised the change from DRK to DASH caused more uproar than this fundamental change. I thought ASIC resistance was a given feature with DASH. Yes, it was ASIC resistance. Even from the very beginning Evan said he was hoping for 2 years without ASICs and strangely enough, that just what he got. This is because the network needed to be strong enough for the change over, which it is. This was not unforeseen. ASICs do strengthen the security of the network. They do this by making it so much harder to mess with transactions via someone having the ability to double the hash between blocks, changing transactions, and getting the longest chain. This could actually happen with a massively successful botnet that is kept idle except when needed, reducing the chance of people discovering the infection, increasing the spread of the bot and being able to control a ton of hash power for short periods of time. And this is because only a very few of the world's computers are hashing, most people don't even know about crypto currencies, but they all have graphics cards that can be hijacked. ASICs are usually not kept idle and thus, their high hash power would be very difficult, thousands of times harder, to double or triple. This makes the network more secure. Anyway, Evan Duffield, our lead developer has said he and the team have come up with a potential solution that he will reveal soon. Hopefully it'll pan out and we'll hear from him soon. One thing you can say about Dash, is that change is not something Dash fears. Dash rolls with the changes (thanks RUSH) Very noble and inspiring, I'm sure. But if you'd studied the real effects of ASICs on small and isolated networks, you wouldn't be so blase. ASICs have been in now for a couple weeks and GPU farms running on high powered kernels have been in for months and months if anything DASH network hash rate has gone down ,,, what is the issue Undoubtedly, the ASICs were in use by the Chinese before being delivered. They've done it with Bitcoin, they've done it with Litecoin no reason not to do it to X11 and Dash.
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Another proud lifetime Dash Foundation member My TanteStefana account was hacked, Beware trading "You'll never reach your destination if you stop to throw stones at every dog that barks."Sir Winston Churchill BTC: 12pu5nMDPEyUGu3HTbnUB5zY5RG65EQE5d
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toknormal
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March 07, 2016, 02:08:54 PM |
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Not sure if this has already been posted here. Think it might have been.
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Macno
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March 07, 2016, 02:20:17 PM |
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Not sure if this has already been posted here. Think it might have been. " We have also found that the Core development team is strongly supported by a censorship regime: all discussion on Bitcointalk and /r/bitcoin regarding competing implementations of the bitcoin protocol is aggressively censored. It is quite incredible that censorship, a method which is most commonly found within Leninist countries, has been so thoroughly implemented within the bitcoin community, which prides itself on liberty." Thank god for Dash and the Masternodes.
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TanteStefana2
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March 07, 2016, 03:02:03 PM |
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Not sure if this has already been posted here. Think it might have been. Actually, no, I hadn't seen this thank you. I'm surprised and happy to see a mining pool leader tackle this. I was under the impression that they were the ones at fault here, but apparently not.
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Another proud lifetime Dash Foundation member My TanteStefana account was hacked, Beware trading "You'll never reach your destination if you stop to throw stones at every dog that barks."Sir Winston Churchill BTC: 12pu5nMDPEyUGu3HTbnUB5zY5RG65EQE5d
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qvan
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March 07, 2016, 03:06:07 PM |
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EDIT: Well, apparently ASICs are a good thing!
I`m not in favor of them. I`m surprised the change from DRK to DASH caused more uproar than this fundamental change. I thought ASIC resistance was a given feature with DASH. Yes, it was ASIC resistance. Even from the very beginning Evan said he was hoping for 2 years without ASICs and strangely enough, that just what he got. This is because the network needed to be strong enough for the change over, which it is. This was not unforeseen. ASICs do strengthen the security of the network. They do this by making it so much harder to mess with transactions via someone having the ability to double the hash between blocks, changing transactions, and getting the longest chain. This could actually happen with a massively successful botnet that is kept idle except when needed, reducing the chance of people discovering the infection, increasing the spread of the bot and being able to control a ton of hash power for short periods of time. And this is because only a very few of the world's computers are hashing, most people don't even know about crypto currencies, but they all have graphics cards that can be hijacked. ASICs are usually not kept idle and thus, their high hash power would be very difficult, thousands of times harder, to double or triple. This makes the network more secure. Anyway, Evan Duffield, our lead developer has said he and the team have come up with a potential solution that he will reveal soon. Hopefully it'll pan out and we'll hear from him soon. One thing you can say about Dash, is that change is not something Dash fears. Dash rolls with the changes (thanks RUSH) Very noble and inspiring, I'm sure. But if you'd studied the real effects of ASICs on small and isolated networks, you wouldn't be so blase. ASICs have been in now for a couple weeks and GPU farms running on high powered kernels have been in for months and months if anything DASH network hash rate has gone down ,,, what is the issue Undoubtedly, the ASICs were in use by the Chinese before being delivered. They've done it with Bitcoin, they've done it with Litecoin no reason not to do it to X11 and Dash. Pffffft! those are nothing compared to Evan and friends instamining the shit of DASH in the first 24 to 48 hours of DASH launch
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toknormal
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March 07, 2016, 03:08:14 PM |
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Actually, no, I hadn't seen this thank you. I'm surprised and happy to see a mining pool leader tackle this. I was under the impression that they were the ones at fault here, but apparently not.
The scientology comparison is hilarious. He's trying to be as polite as he can about it
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TanteStefana2
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March 07, 2016, 03:16:55 PM |
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Actually, no, I hadn't seen this thank you. I'm surprised and happy to see a mining pool leader tackle this. I was under the impression that they were the ones at fault here, but apparently not.
The scientology comparison is hilarious. He's trying to be as polite as he can about it We have guys on this project that are doing as much as Evan in Dash, but they don't have egos, are happy to be a part of an exciting team and never really say anything, except when they need to clarify that something the community thinks isn't being addressed, is. So the atmosphere is so different here. I sincerely hope it continues. I do wish there were an easier way for the community to see all that's going on. But that's difficult.
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Another proud lifetime Dash Foundation member My TanteStefana account was hacked, Beware trading "You'll never reach your destination if you stop to throw stones at every dog that barks."Sir Winston Churchill BTC: 12pu5nMDPEyUGu3HTbnUB5zY5RG65EQE5d
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dafdaf
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March 07, 2016, 05:28:38 PM |
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troll beating a 48-month old dead horse
Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
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gerhard
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March 07, 2016, 05:37:50 PM Last edit: March 07, 2016, 07:51:50 PM by gerhard |
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troll beating a 48-month old dead horse
Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz Yes. Anyone who brings up what they consider to be Dash's "original sin" gets an InstaIgnore(tm).
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qwizzie
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March 07, 2016, 05:58:55 PM |
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Well, i think we can say goodbye to the dump part of our latest rise to power for now, nice little rebound. And if we manage to get things stable around 0.012, it can be considered a pretty nice jump upwards all in all....
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Learn from the past, set detailed and vivid goals for the future and live in the only moment of time over which you have any control : now
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