ripplebtc
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June 12, 2014, 09:45:15 AM |
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Dev is very busy during this period, GUI is the primary task.
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baigreen
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June 12, 2014, 09:53:17 AM |
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Dev is very busy during this period, GUI is the primary task.
mike can do this job~~~
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BBmodBB
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 154
Merit: 100
BTC = FREEDOM IS OUR ONLY HOPE!
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June 12, 2014, 11:24:07 AM |
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$BBR i've been buying tons of coins ...i think we are still undervalued!!! Great Volume!!! https://poloniex.com/exchange/btc_bbr
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*BTCitcoin Wales Club*-- message me for details!--///\\\TELEKINETICS///\\can manipulate objects with their mind. Telekinesis is one of the basis of many superpowers that are based on "controlling/manipulating", it may evolve to the point that a Telekinetic can control anything at a subatomic level.
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dga
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June 12, 2014, 11:46:27 AM |
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Someone mine with supercomputer Someone mines with GPUs and someone else mines with Amazon ec2. How can you tell if the increase in the hashrate is because of ec2 or GPU mining? Price is one hint. The EC2 spot market costs about $0.27 per hour for a big compute machine, plus some data transfer charges, etc., etc. Let's call it $0.30 total. That machine gets about 1.2mhash/s. (Probably 1.3, but I'm conservative). An EC2 miner will launch when: hash/s one day reward cost/day (1200000 * 86400 / diff) * 17 * price * BTC/USD > (24*0.3) (this is about $7.50/day)
Last night, diff was 90B, price was 0.001: 1200000*86400/90000000000 * 17 * .001 * 630 12.33792000000000000000
It was EC2. A cloud miner was making $12 for every $7.50 s/he spent. This morning, price is down to .0008 and diff is back up to 115: 1200000*86400/114000000000 * 17 * .0008 * 630 7.79237052631578947070
(which is just about at the breakeven point). That means we'll start to see the instances be killed and the diff drop off slowly. I bet if you do the analysis, you'll observe that the difficulty of mining BBR over the last few weeks has almost exactly matched the cost to mine it at 1.3mh/s on AWS at $0.27/hour. This is the most easily available, scalable source of CPU for miners. The bright side is that this means the coin is still extremely profitable for home miners once we can get the pools running as efficiently as solo. It's very rare for a coin to be so profitable as to be mineable on EC2. My i7-4770 is getting $2/day of BBR. Before the cryptonote coins came around, it was getting less than $0.50 per day mining Riecoin.
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cbuchner1
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June 12, 2014, 12:23:48 PM Last edit: June 12, 2014, 12:38:33 PM by cbuchner1 |
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hash/s one day reward cost/day (1200000 * 86400 / diff) * 17 * price * BTC/USD > (24*0.3) (this is about $7.50/day)
It's very rare for a coin to be so profitable as to be mineable on EC2. My i7-4770 is getting $2/day of BBR. this, Ladies and Gentlemen is why Prof. Andersen teaches at CMU. Excellent explanations, Sir! I have another observation to make. The difficulty and hash rate has been steadily rising without the "incoming connections" number increasing likewise. This most likely means that more people have started to pool mine, using e.g. simpleminer. These people do not appear as nodes in the Boolberry network, but rather contribute their hash rate to existing pool nodes. Christian
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slavo
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June 12, 2014, 12:25:54 PM |
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why did you chose this name ? It seems not a really good name for a currency to me. I'm thinking of buying but that name just keep me away for now. I'll buy some if you make me a good offer through pm's anyway good luck !
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Zer0Sum
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1588
Merit: 1000
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June 12, 2014, 02:26:19 PM |
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The bright side is that this means the coin is still extremely profitable for home miners once we can get the pools running as efficiently as solo. It's very rare for a coin to be so profitable as to be mineable on EC2. My i7-4770 is getting $2/day of BBR. Before the cryptonote coins came around, it was getting less than $0.50 per day mining Riecoin.
For me with 4-5 i7s... Ducks and Mount appear to be more profitable than BBR... And the payout is consistent (for random payouts I wouldn't bother). There will be a flood of CNotes... then a thinning of the herd. BBR logo should be a big strawberry with a bite out of it... Maybe we get lucky and Apple Inc tries to sue... seriously.
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superresistant
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2142
Merit: 1131
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June 12, 2014, 02:38:11 PM |
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why did you chose this name ? It seems not a really good name for a currency to me. I'm thinking of buying but that name just keep me away for now. I'll buy some if you make me a good offer through pm's anyway good luck ! The name is the main reason I am buying blindly on Poloniex. When I'm buying Boolberry I feel like it's more than just a crypto. It feels like I can almost touch and feel the Boolberries. Hmmm... tasty... I put them all over my naked body.
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cubydu
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June 12, 2014, 02:54:52 PM |
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The bright side is that this means the coin is still extremely profitable for home miners once we can get the pools running as efficiently as solo. It's very rare for a coin to be so profitable as to be mineable on EC2. My i7-4770 is getting $2/day of BBR. Before the cryptonote coins came around, it was getting less than $0.50 per day mining Riecoin.
For me with 4-5 i7s... Ducks and Mount appear to be more profitable than BBR... And the payout is consistent (for random payouts I wouldn't bother). There will be a flood of CNotes... then a thinning of the herd. BBR logo should be a big strawberry with a bite out of it... Maybe we get lucky and Apple Inc tries to sue... seriously. And what can you do with MNT?
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superresistant
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2142
Merit: 1131
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June 12, 2014, 02:59:24 PM |
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The bright side is that this means the coin is still extremely profitable for home miners once we can get the pools running as efficiently as solo. It's very rare for a coin to be so profitable as to be mineable on EC2. My i7-4770 is getting $2/day of BBR. Before the cryptonote coins came around, it was getting less than $0.50 per day mining Riecoin.
For me with 4-5 i7s... Ducks and Mount appear to be more profitable than BBR... And the payout is consistent (for random payouts I wouldn't bother). There will be a flood of CNotes... then a thinning of the herd. BBR logo should be a big strawberry with a bite out of it... Maybe we get lucky and Apple Inc tries to sue... seriously. I own a duckNote pool BTW along with a Monero pool (with a friend): http://monero.crypto-pool.fr/ http://duck.crypto-pool.fr/Lowest orphan rate, optimized code. Soon DDOS protection as we got attacked yesterday.
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loremipsum
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June 12, 2014, 03:05:28 PM |
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Someone mine with supercomputer Someone mines with GPUs and someone else mines with Amazon ec2. How can you tell if the increase in the hashrate is because of ec2 or GPU mining? Price is one hint. The EC2 spot market costs about $0.27 per hour for a big compute machine, plus some data transfer charges, etc., etc. Let's call it $0.30 total. That machine gets about 1.2mhash/s. (Probably 1.3, but I'm conservative). An EC2 miner will launch when: hash/s one day reward cost/day (1200000 * 86400 / diff) * 17 * price * BTC/USD > (24*0.3) (this is about $7.50/day)
Last night, diff was 90B, price was 0.001: 1200000*86400/90000000000 * 17 * .001 * 630 12.33792000000000000000
It was EC2. A cloud miner was making $12 for every $7.50 s/he spent. This morning, price is down to .0008 and diff is back up to 115: 1200000*86400/114000000000 * 17 * .0008 * 630 7.79237052631578947070
(which is just about at the breakeven point). That means we'll start to see the instances be killed and the diff drop off slowly. I bet if you do the analysis, you'll observe that the difficulty of mining BBR over the last few weeks has almost exactly matched the cost to mine it at 1.3mh/s on AWS at $0.27/hour. This is the most easily available, scalable source of CPU for miners. The bright side is that this means the coin is still extremely profitable for home miners once we can get the pools running as efficiently as solo. It's very rare for a coin to be so profitable as to be mineable on EC2. My i7-4770 is getting $2/day of BBR. Before the cryptonote coins came around, it was getting less than $0.50 per day mining Riecoin. Thanks for the very detailed answer!
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dga
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June 12, 2014, 03:23:12 PM |
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It's simpleminer with latest fix from dga It's not merged yet I've set up my own local pool to test on and the fix seems OK, as you noted. I've submitted a pull request for it. I also changed some of the settings in the pool config for vardiff to make it adapt faster - maybe a bit too aggressive because I have a fast CPU, but probably similar to what you did: "varDiff": { "minDiff": 500000, "maxDiff": 10000000, "targetTime": 100, "retargetTime": 15, "variancePercent": 50, "maxJump": 200000 }, With these changes on a *local* and unloaded pool I was getting 320kh/s. It's probably less on a remote pool, of course, but getting better. That's much closer to what solo would get. Next up, I'll try to improve the hash rate of the miner a little. I don't manage the multiple threads very efficiently, so it's only getting 630% of CPU on my machine, where it should be getting about 780%. I can get this improved soon (maybe by tomorrow), I think.
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Zer0Sum
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1588
Merit: 1000
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June 12, 2014, 03:40:18 PM Last edit: June 12, 2014, 03:59:11 PM by Zer0Sum |
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The bright side is that this means the coin is still extremely profitable for home miners once we can get the pools running as efficiently as solo. It's very rare for a coin to be so profitable as to be mineable on EC2. My i7-4770 is getting $2/day of BBR. Before the cryptonote coins came around, it was getting less than $0.50 per day mining Riecoin.
For me with 4-5 i7s... Ducks and Mount appear to be more profitable than BBR... And the payout is consistent (for random payouts I wouldn't bother). There will be a flood of CNotes... then a thinning of the herd. BBR logo should be a big strawberry with a bite out of it... Maybe we get lucky and Apple Inc tries to sue... seriously. And what can you do with MNT? Like superresistant... I can almost touch and feel them, etc... Also CNotes are now like 20-30% of Poloniex business... They should be happy to list every one that comes along.
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cubydu
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June 12, 2014, 03:43:36 PM |
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It's simpleminer with latest fix from dga It's not merged yet I've set up my own local pool to test on and the fix seems OK, as you noted. I've submitted a pull request for it. I also changed some of the settings in the pool config for vardiff to make it adapt faster - maybe a bit too aggressive because I have a fast CPU, but probably similar to what you did: "varDiff": { "minDiff": 500000, "maxDiff": 10000000, "targetTime": 100, "retargetTime": 15, "variancePercent": 50, "maxJump": 200000 }, With these changes on a *local* and unloaded pool I was getting 320kh/s. It's probably less on a remote pool, of course, but getting better. That's much closer to what solo would get. Next up, I'll try to improve the hash rate of the miner a little. I don't manage the multiple threads very efficiently, so it's only getting 630% of CPU on my machine, where it should be getting about 780%. I can get this improved soon (maybe by tomorrow), I think. My pool works with "varDiff": { "minDiff": 50000, "maxDiff": 10000000, "targetTime": 10, "retargetTime": 5, "variancePercent": 30, "maxJump": 500000 },
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btc-mike
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June 12, 2014, 04:28:07 PM |
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I am working on updates to first post. It won't be beautiful (yet). I am also working to correct mail issue on forum. Almost done.
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uvt9
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June 12, 2014, 05:27:18 PM |
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total hashrate of all the pool is less than 5 MH/s while network hash rate is 2GH/s, i wonder where is all the rest ? Wild Keccak algorithm is supposed to be much more effecient for GPU mining, right ?
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dga
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June 12, 2014, 05:46:58 PM |
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total hashrate of all the pool is less than 5 MH/s while network hash rate is 2GH/s, i wonder where is all the rest ? Wild Keccak algorithm is supposed to be much more effecient for GPU mining, right ?
Solo is still decently more efficient than pool -- probably 25%, depending on where you are located relative to the pool. Slowly fixing that, but for now, if you have a few machines, you're better off running solo than using one of the pools. Or run your own pool on the same LAN as your workers -- that part is working very well and achieving nearly as good efficiency as the daemon miner.
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btc-mike
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June 12, 2014, 06:52:00 PM |
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Forum email is fixed. You can register here -> http://boolberry.com/forum/index.phpIf you already registered and did not receive email, send me a pm with the username or email you used. I will resend confirmation.
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crypto_zoidberg (OP)
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June 13, 2014, 01:45:05 AM Last edit: June 13, 2014, 02:15:28 AM by crypto_zoidberg |
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Good news! I've uploaded preview version of GUI with wallet functions (windows build). This is early alpha version, beware of bugs. It's actually just first version that able to send and receive money, pretty ugly. Everyone who want to have fun: boolberry.com/downloads.htmlWhat next: 0. Integrate qt-daemon into build system 1. Build and test it for Mac and Linux 2. Preapare normal deploy binaries 3. Adjust html layout to make it looking nice 4. add address aliases support 5. add multi-recipient feature 6. implement tray-mode 7. Add multiple wallets support (work with few opened wallets) ..... we have a tons of work ahead..... GUI branch: https://github.com/cryptozoidberg/boolberry/tree/GUI(boost libs path hardcoded, will be fixed tomorow)
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