Anabetsi
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 15
Merit: 0
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December 17, 2017, 08:42:07 PM |
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How many threads does this coin need? Huh
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owlcatz
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3808
Merit: 1974
https://talkimg.com - Fck Imgur/BBwhatever
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December 18, 2017, 02:13:02 AM |
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How many threads does this coin need? Huh
I don't know because this and speculation are all I follow. What's your point I guess? People are mostly on reddit from what I have heard?
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. I C Λ R U S | | | | █████▄▄█████▄▄ ████████▀▀▀████ ██████▀█████▀███ ████████████████ ████████████████ ████████████████ ░▄█████████████████ ███████████████████ ███████████████████ ████████░░░▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀ ████████▄▄▄████████ ███████████████████ █████████████████▀ | ░░░███ ▄▄▄███ ██████ ░░░███ ░░░███ ░░░███ ░░░███ ░░░███ ░░░███ ░░░███ ▄████████ ███▌░▐███ ████████▀ | | | | | █████████████████████ █████████████████████ █████████████████████ ██████▀▀▀▀████▀▀█████ █████░░▄▄░░██░░░█████ █████▄▄██░░███░░█████ █████▀▀▀▀░░▀██░░█████ ████░░░░▄▄▄▄█▀░░▀████ ████░░░░░░░░█░▀▀░████ █████████████████████ █████████████████████ █████████████████████ █████████████████████ | ████ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ████ | ████ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ████ | ████ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ██ ████ | | | | ████ ██
██ ████ | | ████ ██
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[/ce
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Hueristic
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3976
Merit: 5408
Doomed to see the future and unable to prevent it
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December 18, 2017, 02:43:04 AM |
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I'm interested in Monero and love the concept but someone I respect objects to it for the following reasons:
- it uses eliptic curve cryptography, which is known to be a method of choice when the NSA wants you to use something they can break and others can't
WRONG, NSA backdoored Dual_EC_DRBG random number generator library, which just so happens to be elliptic curve. It was added as a default library in some of the most secure programs and was pushed into the NIST release. Also by being in this library release on systems (like winblows) that did not use it as default left an attack vector that all they had to do was change the library being used (simple regkey in winblows) and you would never know you were using a compromised library. Actually eliptic curve is used to defeat various attack vectors the NSA uses so you should get your facts straight. As estimated by the authors behind the Logjam attack, the much more difficult precomputation needed to solve the discrete log problem for a 1024-bit prime would cost on the order of $100 million, well within the budget of large national intelligence agency such as the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA). The Logjam authors speculate that precomputation against widely reused 1024-bit DH primes is behind claims in leaked NSA documents that NSA is able to break much of current cryptography.[3]
To avoid these vulnerabilities, authors recommend use of elliptic curve cryptography, for which no similar attack is known. Failing that, they recommend that the order, p, of the Diffie–Hellman group should be at least 2048 bits. They estimate that the pre-computation required for a 2048-bit prime is 109 more difficult than for 1024-bit primes.[3]
If NSA is breaking Diffie–Hellman, but has not pushed for US sites to upgrade to longer keys, then it would be an example of NSA's NOBUS policy of not closing security holes that NSA believes only they can exploit. - ECC can trivially be broken by a quantum computer
This is just so much of a joke of a statement it doesn't warrant a response. A sufficiently large qubit QC will break any cryptography period. - It uses many constants in the crypto that aren't "nothing up my sleeve numbers”. This is one of the main ways to make crypto breakable by only the organization who chose the constants.
By selectively omitting commonly selected numbers you can increase the randomness strength of elliptic curve. - the constants were created by an author that only goes by a pseudonym
So what? Kinda like Satoshi Nagasaki? - NSA has recently started trying to move federal systems away from ECC, ie they are likely aware of a weakness in it that may soon be exploitable by others
They are preparing for QC realities and have admitted that Suite B is inadequate to the task, why this is in your argument against Monero is anyones guess. Can anyone please address these concerns? Thanks in advance.
READ THIS, You can tell you friend a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. https://blog.cryptographyengineering.com/2015/01/14/hopefully-last-post-ill-ever-write-on/
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“Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing.”
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revelacaogr
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1316
Merit: 1021
2009 Alea iacta est
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December 18, 2017, 09:38:14 AM |
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garytheasshole
Full Member
Offline
Activity: 406
Merit: 105
Chosŏn Minjujuŭi Inmin Konghwaguk
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December 18, 2017, 10:00:04 AM |
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I'm interested in Monero and love the concept but someone I respect objects to it for the following reasons:
- it uses eliptic curve cryptography, which is known to be a method of choice when the NSA wants you to use something they can break and others can't
WRONG, NSA backdoored Dual_EC_DRBG random number generator library, which just so happens to be elliptic curve. It was added as a default library in some of the most secure programs and was pushed into the NIST release. Also by being in this library release on systems (like winblows) that did not use it as default left an attack vector that all they had to do was change the library being used (simple regkey in winblows) and you would never know you were using a compromised library. Actually eliptic curve is used to defeat various attack vectors the NSA uses so you should get your facts straight. As estimated by the authors behind the Logjam attack, the much more difficult precomputation needed to solve the discrete log problem for a 1024-bit prime would cost on the order of $100 million, well within the budget of large national intelligence agency such as the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA). The Logjam authors speculate that precomputation against widely reused 1024-bit DH primes is behind claims in leaked NSA documents that NSA is able to break much of current cryptography.[3]
To avoid these vulnerabilities, authors recommend use of elliptic curve cryptography, for which no similar attack is known. Failing that, they recommend that the order, p, of the Diffie–Hellman group should be at least 2048 bits. They estimate that the pre-computation required for a 2048-bit prime is 109 more difficult than for 1024-bit primes.[3]
If NSA is breaking Diffie–Hellman, but has not pushed for US sites to upgrade to longer keys, then it would be an example of NSA's NOBUS policy of not closing security holes that NSA believes only they can exploit. - ECC can trivially be broken by a quantum computer
This is just so much of a joke of a statement it doesn't warrant a response. A sufficiently large qubit QC will break any cryptography period. - It uses many constants in the crypto that aren't "nothing up my sleeve numbers”. This is one of the main ways to make crypto breakable by only the organization who chose the constants.
By selectively omitting commonly selected numbers you can increase the randomness strength of elliptic curve. - the constants were created by an author that only goes by a pseudonym
So what? Kinda like Satoshi Nagasaki? - NSA has recently started trying to move federal systems away from ECC, ie they are likely aware of a weakness in it that may soon be exploitable by others
They are preparing for QC realities and have admitted that Suite B is inadequate to the task, why this is in your argument against Monero is anyones guess. Can anyone please address these concerns? Thanks in advance.
READ THIS, You can tell you friend a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. https://blog.cryptographyengineering.com/2015/01/14/hopefully-last-post-ill-ever-write-on/We're beyond FUCKED if ECC is broken, Monero is not a concern at all https://ianix.com/pub/curve25519-deployment.html
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jgkolt
Newbie
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Activity: 3
Merit: 0
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December 19, 2017, 03:45:18 AM |
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I am a new to Monero and running into some issues syncing the blockchain for the first time. I downloaded and ran monero-gui-v0.11.1.0 . The sync was taking over a day and still had a lot left so I looked for ways to speed this up. I read you can download the raw blockchain ( https://www.monero.how/tutorial-how-to-speed-up-initial-blockchain-sync) imported and finished the sync. Once it finishes I save and shut down the daemon. I launched the gui and it tries to start syncing all over again. Am I doing something wrong? I thought the blockchain was fully synced and downloaded and I don't know if it will ever finish syncing through the Gui. Any suggestions on getting the blockchain to sync faster through the gui? Thank you for your help!
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comicbook125
Member
Offline
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
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December 19, 2017, 04:01:08 AM |
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It starts to get less profit for me in mining XMR, perhaps switching to trading only.
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explorer
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2016
Merit: 1259
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December 19, 2017, 04:05:37 AM |
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I am a new to Monero and running into some issues syncing the blockchain for the first time. I downloaded and ran monero-gui-v0.11.1.0 . The sync was taking over a day and still had a lot left so I looked for ways to speed this up. I read you can download the raw blockchain ( https://www.monero.how/tutorial-how-to-speed-up-initial-blockchain-sync) imported and finished the sync. Once it finishes I save and shut down the daemon. I launched the gui and it tries to start syncing all over again. Am I doing something wrong? I thought the blockchain was fully synced and downloaded and I don't know if it will ever finish syncing through the Gui. Any suggestions on getting the blockchain to sync faster through the gui? Thank you for your help! On what system? Was it syncing the blockchain, or the wallet to the blockchain? You can connect to a remote node for use until your own copy of the blockchain is ready to go. I find that starting the daemon, and not starting GUI until after it is up to speed works best is the only way to make it work on my old windows setup. I put this entirely down to old hardware that was not fast even new, and of course, windows. As has been posted before, cutting edge software works best on cutting edge hardware.
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jgkolt
Newbie
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Activity: 3
Merit: 0
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December 19, 2017, 07:29:25 AM Last edit: December 19, 2017, 08:02:56 AM by jgkolt |
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I am a new to Monero and running into some issues syncing the blockchain for the first time. I downloaded and ran monero-gui-v0.11.1.0 . The sync was taking over a day and still had a lot left so I looked for ways to speed this up. I read you can download the raw blockchain ( https://www.monero.how/tutorial-how-to-speed-up-initial-blockchain-sync) imported and finished the sync. Once it finishes I save and shut down the daemon. I launched the gui and it tries to start syncing all over again. Am I doing something wrong? I thought the blockchain was fully synced and downloaded and I don't know if it will ever finish syncing through the Gui. Any suggestions on getting the blockchain to sync faster through the gui? Thank you for your help! On what system? Was it syncing the blockchain, or the wallet to the blockchain? You can connect to a remote node for use until your own copy of the blockchain is ready to go. I find that starting the daemon, and not starting GUI until after it is up to speed works best is the only way to make it work on my old windows setup. I put this entirely down to old hardware that was not fast even new, and of course, windows. As has been posted before, cutting edge software works best on cutting edge hardware. My local system is running Windows 10 and has an AMD 6 core processor, 12 gb memory, SSD, and a 100 Mbit fiber connection. It is not the newest computer but I didn't think it would take this long to sync. The disk usage doesn't go over 10%, the cpu doesnt go over 38%, and network is under 3 Mbps. I don't actually know the if it is syncing the blockchain or the wallet to the blockchain. Below is what I did: - Downloaded and installed Monero https://downloads.getmonero.org/win64
- Downloaded and copied blockchain.raw to monero gui folderhttps://downloads.getmonero.org/blockchain.raw
- Imported the blockchain monero-blockchain-import.exe --verify 0 --input-file ./blockchain.raw
- Ran the daemon until it was fully synced monerod.exe
- Saved with save
- Opened Monero Gui with monero-wallet-gui.exe
- Entered password and the status at the bottom left said it was Synchronizing
The synchronizing that seems to take forever is the one at the bottom left within the wallet. To troubleshoot I also rebooted, and to start fresh between tests, I deleted the monero programs folder, redownloaded monero, deleted c:\programdata\bitmonero, deleted C:\Users\%username%\AppData\Roaming\bitmonero, deleted the registry location Computer\HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\monero-project and started over at my first step importing the blockchain. Also at one point started over and used the monero-wallet-cli.exe after the blockchain synced with monerod.exe but I didn't know how to open an existing wallet, so I deleted it all and started over with the gui instead of cli at that step. Thanks for your help as I learn more about this. Below is a screenshot of the synching window I am referencing. https://i.imgur.com/e9fdoby.png
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explorer
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2016
Merit: 1259
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December 19, 2017, 07:58:20 AM |
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I am a new to Monero and running into some issues syncing the blockchain for the first time. I downloaded and ran monero-gui-v0.11.1.0 . The sync was taking over a day and still had a lot left so I looked for ways to speed this up. I read you can download the raw blockchain ( https://www.monero.how/tutorial-how-to-speed-up-initial-blockchain-sync) imported and finished the sync. Once it finishes I save and shut down the daemon. I launched the gui and it tries to start syncing all over again. Am I doing something wrong? I thought the blockchain was fully synced and downloaded and I don't know if it will ever finish syncing through the Gui. Any suggestions on getting the blockchain to sync faster through the gui? Thank you for your help! On what system? Was it syncing the blockchain, or the wallet to the blockchain? You can connect to a remote node for use until your own copy of the blockchain is ready to go. I find that starting the daemon, and not starting GUI until after it is up to speed works best is the only way to make it work on my old windows setup. I put this entirely down to old hardware that was not fast even new, and of course, windows. As has been posted before, cutting edge software works best on cutting edge hardware. My local system has an AMD 6 core processor, 12 gb memory, SSD, and a 100 Mbit fiber connection. It is not the newest computer but I didn't think it would take this long to sync. The disk usage doesn't go over 10%, the cpu doesnt go over 38%, and network is under 3 Mbps. I don't actually know the if it is syncing the blockchain or the wallet to the blockchain. Below is what I did: - Downloaded and installed Monero https://downloads.getmonero.org/win64
- Downloaded and copied blockchain.raw to monero gui folderhttps://downloads.getmonero.org/blockchain.raw
- Imported the blockchain monero-blockchain-import.exe --verify 0 --input-file ./blockchain.raw
- Ran the daemon until it was fully synced monerod.exe
- Saved with save
- Opened Monero Gui with monero-wallet-gui.exe
- Entered password and the status at the bottom left said it was Synchronizing
The synchronizing that seems to take forever is the one at the bottom left within the wallet. To troubleshoot I also rebooted, deleted the monero programs folder, redownloaded monero, deleted c:\programdata\bitmonero, deleted C:\Users\%username%\AppData\Roaming\bitmonero, deleted the registry location Computer\HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\monero-project and started over. Also at one point started over and used the monero-wallet-cli.exe after the blockchain synced with monerod.exe but I didn't know how to open an existing wallet, so I deleted it all and started over with the gui instead of cli at that step. Thanks for your help as I learn more about this. Below is a screenshot of the synching window I am referencing. Sounds like you deleted the blockchain in your troubleshooting. Your system seems sufficient that if you just let it run, it would be done or nearly so the next morning. You did not mention what OS. Not that I have a clue, but by now I at least know the basic info the guru's will want in order to help you With your system I think I'd just start the GUI and let it do the rest. Check on it in a day or two.
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DRVX
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December 19, 2017, 08:01:31 AM |
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I love Monero, I bought it in 100$ price and thought it was too much. But now I'm in good profit! Monero is the best!
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jgkolt
Newbie
Offline
Activity: 3
Merit: 0
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December 19, 2017, 08:05:05 AM |
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I am a new to Monero and running into some issues syncing the blockchain for the first time. I downloaded and ran monero-gui-v0.11.1.0 . The sync was taking over a day and still had a lot left so I looked for ways to speed this up. I read you can download the raw blockchain ( https://www.monero.how/tutorial-how-to-speed-up-initial-blockchain-sync) imported and finished the sync. Once it finishes I save and shut down the daemon. I launched the gui and it tries to start syncing all over again. Am I doing something wrong? I thought the blockchain was fully synced and downloaded and I don't know if it will ever finish syncing through the Gui. Any suggestions on getting the blockchain to sync faster through the gui? Thank you for your help! On what system? Was it syncing the blockchain, or the wallet to the blockchain? You can connect to a remote node for use until your own copy of the blockchain is ready to go. I find that starting the daemon, and not starting GUI until after it is up to speed works best is the only way to make it work on my old windows setup. I put this entirely down to old hardware that was not fast even new, and of course, windows. As has been posted before, cutting edge software works best on cutting edge hardware. My local system has an AMD 6 core processor, 12 gb memory, SSD, and a 100 Mbit fiber connection. It is not the newest computer but I didn't think it would take this long to sync. The disk usage doesn't go over 10%, the cpu doesnt go over 38%, and network is under 3 Mbps. I don't actually know the if it is syncing the blockchain or the wallet to the blockchain. Below is what I did: - Downloaded and installed Monero https://downloads.getmonero.org/win64
- Downloaded and copied blockchain.raw to monero gui folderhttps://downloads.getmonero.org/blockchain.raw
- Imported the blockchain monero-blockchain-import.exe --verify 0 --input-file ./blockchain.raw
- Ran the daemon until it was fully synced monerod.exe
- Saved with save
- Opened Monero Gui with monero-wallet-gui.exe
- Entered password and the status at the bottom left said it was Synchronizing
The synchronizing that seems to take forever is the one at the bottom left within the wallet. To troubleshoot I also rebooted, deleted the monero programs folder, redownloaded monero, deleted c:\programdata\bitmonero, deleted C:\Users\%username%\AppData\Roaming\bitmonero, deleted the registry location Computer\HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\monero-project and started over. Also at one point started over and used the monero-wallet-cli.exe after the blockchain synced with monerod.exe but I didn't know how to open an existing wallet, so I deleted it all and started over with the gui instead of cli at that step. Thanks for your help as I learn more about this. Below is a screenshot of the synching window I am referencing. https://i.imgur.com/e9fdoby.pngSounds like you deleted the blockchain in your troubleshooting. Your system seems sufficient that if you just let it run, it would be done or nearly so the next morning. You did not mention what OS. Not that I have a clue, but by now I at least know the basic info the guru's will want in order to help you With your system I think I'd just start the GUI and let it do the rest. Check on it in a day or two. I am running Windows 10 and also updated the first post. I will let it run over night and see where it is in the morning (last time 24 hours was not enough). Thanks for help so far. If anyone else also has ideas I am welcome to hear them too.
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naska21
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December 19, 2017, 08:13:54 AM |
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yeah, from now on it can be integrated into the next core wallet release and this is a huge advance, I think it will move the market.
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dEBRUYNE
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2268
Merit: 1141
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December 19, 2017, 10:06:29 AM |
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I am a new to Monero and running into some issues syncing the blockchain for the first time. I downloaded and ran monero-gui-v0.11.1.0 . The sync was taking over a day and still had a lot left so I looked for ways to speed this up. I read you can download the raw blockchain ( https://www.monero.how/tutorial-how-to-speed-up-initial-blockchain-sync) imported and finished the sync. Once it finishes I save and shut down the daemon. I launched the gui and it tries to start syncing all over again. Am I doing something wrong? I thought the blockchain was fully synced and downloaded and I don't know if it will ever finish syncing through the Gui. Any suggestions on getting the blockchain to sync faster through the gui? Thank you for your help! See: Note: This sync actually involves two kinds of syncing. First, the blockchain sync, which is basically downloading the blockchain from other nodes / peers. Second, the wallet sync, which is the wallet “refreshing” / scanning blocks looking for transactions belonging to your address / wallet. The GUI is currently using the same status bar for both syncs, which can be a bit confusing to newcomers. Fortunately, this will be fixed in the next release. Thus, if you see the “Blocks remaining:” starting all over again, it’s the wallet refreshing. https://medium.com/@Electricsheep56/the-monero-gui-wallet-broken-down-in-plain-english-bd2889b8c202
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comicbook125
Member
Offline
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
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December 19, 2017, 11:26:57 AM |
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I start to regret not buying more coins since when it was 40$ each
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DefendKebab
Sr. Member
Offline
Activity: 439
Merit: 250
Hassan Al-Kebab
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December 19, 2017, 05:51:16 PM |
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Nice developments.
I think this weekend we'll see $500.
I think 600 / 700 easy , very undervalued compared to other projects.
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Güçlü Türkiye Kebab Defenderler
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visdude
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1081
Merit: 1001
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December 19, 2017, 11:16:27 PM |
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I've been exploring and trying to set up a node running in one of my local PCs (Windows 7) for the intent purpose of allowing Monerujo to connect to it as my private node instead of using one of the public nodes for obvious reasons. These are my port forwards (DD-WRT router): These are the args inserted in the monerod Shortcut Target: ~monerod.exe --rpc-bind-ip 0.0.0.0 --restricted-rpc --confirm-external-bind I then used the following node address in Monerujo as my (private) node address: EXT.WAN.IP.ADDRESS:18081 Unfortunately, Monerujo says: "Cannot reach node! Try again or another." Is there anything I missed in my setup? Since I'm definitely networking/CLI-challenged, I wouldn't be surprised. I also tried it on a Windows 7 GUI wallet (netbook) for good measure but nothing happens when I click on "Connect":
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visdude
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1081
Merit: 1001
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December 20, 2017, 03:22:35 AM |
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If you were gonna pad your post count, at least post something significant and useful...not just for the sake of posting in order to pad your post count [intentional circular reference].
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Chicken_76
Jr. Member
Offline
Activity: 56
Merit: 7
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December 20, 2017, 08:37:20 AM |
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@visdude Try the wallet on a computer in your LAN, and use the private (LAN IP) of the machine running the daemon. Also worth double-checking, have you opened those ports in the firewall on the daemon machine?
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