lncm
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March 13, 2019, 03:20:16 PM |
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I can't open my monero Legder wallet with 0.14. I got "Could't open wallet. Wrong Device status : SW=6e00 (EXPECT=9000, MASK=ffff)".
Any ideas?
EDIT - forget it, I was on firmware 1.4.2. Updated Ledger live and firmware to 1.5.5 and now it works.
Please not that there is a bug in Ledger Monero app v1.1.3. Therefore, Ledger Monero users are advised not to use their wallets until Ledger Monero app v1.2.x is out. https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/b0jjgc/missing_xmr/eif5jdl/Yes, I was aware of that. Just checking the balance.
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tranthidung
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Farewell o_e_l_e_o
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March 13, 2019, 04:15:45 PM |
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Among top altcoins, Ethereum, Stellar, and DASH have all rocketed. So, when is the turn of Monero? The coin has probably warmed up a little bit if we look at its volume recent weeks. https://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/monero/historical-data/In contrast, its price has remained at lows during the same period.
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florida.haunted
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March 13, 2019, 08:49:39 PM |
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In that discussion, as I've understood, sech1 focuses on the problem to make ASICs as efficient and as complicated as Intel CPU. linzhi-sonia says it will try because he likes this stuff with ASICs and their developing. What I think? We should focus on TRUE randomness instead of making mining algo to be too difficult for ASICs just because complicated design of the algo, for example, adding a true virtual machine level into algo design, like somewhat done in RandomX. Currently, cn/r uses block height as a source of randomness. And as linzhi-sonia mentioned, he will just add an interpreter or pre-compiled parts to the algo, because block height is known in advance to the future. I propose to add TRUE random generator via external ORACLES (like oracles work in Ethereum contracts). Or, good source of true randomness is LONG hash of all the transactions in last 100 blocks for example. Thus linzhi-sonia can't predict and pre-compile no parts of mining algo. Also we may dream about FLOATING POINT mining algo based on fining solutions of differential or integral equations of random nature. Finally we may focus on solution findings of SYMBOLIC mathematical problems, randomly generated. What do you think, Community? There's an active issue thread on GitHub discussing options for PoW moving forward: https://github.com/monero-project/meta/issues/316I've written there: https://github.com/monero-project/meta/issues/316#issuecomment-472597366
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dnsokoljuk
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March 13, 2019, 09:16:38 PM |
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How I know, Monero is the most invisible and hiden crypto between another.
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Hueristic
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Doomed to see the future and unable to prevent it
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March 14, 2019, 01:39:28 AM Last edit: March 14, 2019, 02:31:14 AM by Hueristic |
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Long time since I posted here. Glad to see the fork went well. Pointed all my GPU miners at Monero tonight to help out the network. Hope everyone is good and it looks like the great community I remember is alive and well. Glad Moreno is sticking to true decentralization. Monero brought me into the crypto space. Monero the only privacy coin I would ever use.
Long time no see, glad to see you post. Thanks, thas a good read. lol'd <moneromooo> Too much physical money will distort rays of light passing close to it indeed. Thanks for the link, IOU +sM (ran out )
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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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dEBRUYNE
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March 14, 2019, 10:55:39 AM |
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florida.haunted
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March 14, 2019, 11:44:22 AM |
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I've just written more: -- Guys most of you think in too generalized manner, you attempt to predict too far future, you almost admit defeat in front of ASICs... It is a bad way methodologically. We are living in the current iteration. There is a week passed after last hard fork to cn/r. First, it must be said, there is no FPGA or quick understanding how to program FPGA against cn/r. Technically it is possible in few hours or days. But we observe low hashrate still, week passed. So they CAN'T do that quickly at least. Thus, fight against ASICs/FPGA is POSSIBLE. Furthermore, cn/r is quite simple algo with very basic levels of virtualization and randomization. Read my comment above, what if we introduce HARD levels of virtualization and randomization? There is physics: ASICs/FPGA can't be MUCH more profitable than CPU or GPU, if quite perfect mining algo is designed. Today, let's focus on tasks how to add strong virtualization and randomization to the algo. RandomX with memory scratch-pad reduced from 4Gb to 256Mb (to support even Raspberry Pi) is good level of virtualization. To add randomization we may consider external oracles like ones in Ethereum contracts or long hashes (sha512, etc) applied to concatenated transactions of last 100 blocks for example. Let's think in this direction. Fundamental physics is on our side: if mining algo has sufficient levels of virtualization and randomization, ASIC/FPGA manufacturers MUST implement Intel-like CPU! Let them compete with Intel directly! -- https://github.com/monero-project/meta/issues/316#issuecomment-472815812
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Hueristic
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March 14, 2019, 09:11:08 PM Last edit: March 24, 2019, 01:48:06 AM by Hueristic |
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I've just written more: -- Guys most of you think in too generalized manner, you attempt to predict too far future, you almost admit defeat in front of ASICs... It is a bad way methodologically. We are living in the current iteration. There is a week passed after last hard fork to cn/r. First, it must be said, there is no FPGA or quick understanding how to program FPGA against cn/r. Technically it is possible in few hours or days. But we observe low hashrate still, week passed. So they CAN'T do that quickly at least. Thus, fight against ASICs/FPGA is POSSIBLE. Furthermore, cn/r is quite simple algo with very basic levels of virtualization and randomization. Read my comment above, what if we introduce HARD levels of virtualization and randomization? There is physics: ASICs/FPGA can't be MUCH more profitable than CPU or GPU, if quite perfect mining algo is designed. Today, let's focus on tasks how to add strong virtualization and randomization to the algo. RandomX with memory scratch-pad reduced from 4Gb to 256Mb (to support even Raspberry Pi) is good level of virtualization. To add randomization we may consider external oracles like ones in Ethereum contracts or long hashes (sha512, etc) applied to concatenated transactions of last 100 blocks for example. Let's think in this direction. Fundamental physics is on our side: if mining algo has sufficient levels of virtualization and randomization, ASIC/FPGA manufacturers MUST implement Intel-like CPU! Let them compete with Intel directly! -- https://github.com/monero-project/meta/issues/316#issuecomment-472815812Excellent points, IOU +sM When will desktop FPGA cpus be available? 3k for a fpga cpu is not mainstream. BTW I hate these Hybrid FPGAs being called FPGA. They are hybrids, at least Intel calls them what they are. FPGAs have no SOC component.
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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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Millionero
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March 15, 2019, 10:53:54 AM |
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wtf does SoC mean Something-on-Chip?
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Globb0
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March 15, 2019, 11:00:03 AM |
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" What is SoC FPGA?
FPGA is a constantly evolving technology, especially in terms of logic density and speed. Among the newest improvements in the FPGA world are System on a Chip (SoC) FPGA devices. A SoC FPGA integrates a hard processor core and programmable logic on the same die.
"
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Febo
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March 15, 2019, 04:22:21 PM |
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How I know, Monero is the most invisible and hiden crypto between another.
You check the Monero wallet rich list: https://moneroblocks.info/richlist
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Globb0
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March 15, 2019, 05:40:26 PM |
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BTW I hate these Hybrid FPGAs being called FPGA. They are hybrids, at least Intel calls them what they are. FPGAs have no SOC component.
is this the latest development then? Among the newest improvements in the FPGA world are System on a Chip (SoC) FPGA devices. A SoC FPGA integrates a hard processor core and programmable logic on the same die.
or BS ? Also am I dense eeproms aren't new? its what it sounds like
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jwinterm
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March 15, 2019, 09:16:41 PM |
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MFW I'm reading the proof of work GitHub thread:
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Hueristic
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March 16, 2019, 01:37:36 AM Last edit: March 16, 2019, 01:54:36 AM by Hueristic |
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https://github.com/monero-project/meta/issues/316#issuecomment-473323785MFW I'm reading the proof of work GitHub thread: Had to mute it, my inbox went boom! Its going faster than the WO thread.
BTW I hate these Hybrid FPGAs being called FPGA. They are hybrids, at least Intel calls them what they are. FPGAs have no SOC component.
is this the latest development then? Among the newest improvements in the FPGA world are System on a Chip (SoC) FPGA devices. A SoC FPGA integrates a hard processor core and programmable logic on the same die.
or BS ? Also am I dense eeproms aren't new? its what it sounds like I have not kept on substrate processes for almost 2 decades but from what I gleaned a few months back it seems they have been able to create programmable logic gates on the same die which is why we see the ability of these new hybrids to interface with memory at such speeds. In the past all the architecture was limited by the slower programmable gates but now they are both on die. I have no clue if they are using separate substrates fused or if there is one that can handle both forms or what, but it opens up for some really outstanding improvements if they can get the cost down on basic desktop chips and/or gpu's. ITs the fact that the SOCs are not programmable and therefore operate at full speed yet the programmable gates are on die and therefore not limited by any bus interface or limited to using the slower programmable gates as memory or controllers that makes them so quick and versitile. Hope this was clear, I'm really no longer up on any of this shit and frankly was quite surprised that they had actually managed a hybrid method. I think I postulated a year or so ago there was no way they could do it until they came up with a hybrid method and apparently they already had. Doh
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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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Hueristic
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March 16, 2019, 01:53:05 AM |
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dbl
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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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Globb0
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March 16, 2019, 10:28:16 AM |
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Seems clear thanks
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Wind_FURY
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March 17, 2019, 09:49:15 AM |
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Hi Monero community, I know anonymint spreads misinformation, but before I debate with a user who posted this blog's link in a Lightning Network topic, I would like to know more if the statement quoted, and bolded is true. https://steemit.com/blockchain-scaling/@anonymint/lightning-networks-must-fail-if-it-succeeds Monero’s adaptive block size protocol doesn’t prevent the destruction of the transaction fee market because without the minimum transaction fee periodically adjusted by centralized control (the same @fluffypony centralized control that is recently changing the PoW every ~6 months in a futile attempt to defeat ASICs) promotes the block size to increase so that transaction fees decline to ~0 (i.e. to miners’ negligible incremental costs for adding additional transactions).
Is there a "minimum transaction fee" adjusted by centralized control?
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equipoise
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March 17, 2019, 01:19:09 PM |
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Hi Monero community, I know anonymint spreads misinformation, but before I debate with a user who posted this blog's link in a Lightning Network topic, I would like to know more if the statement quoted, and bolded is true. https://steemit.com/blockchain-scaling/@anonymint/lightning-networks-must-fail-if-it-succeeds Monero’s adaptive block size protocol doesn’t prevent the destruction of the transaction fee market because without the minimum transaction fee periodically adjusted by centralized control (the same @fluffypony centralized control that is recently changing the PoW every ~6 months in a futile attempt to defeat ASICs) promotes the block size to increase so that transaction fees decline to ~0 (i.e. to miners’ negligible incremental costs for adding additional transactions).
Is there a "minimum transaction fee" adjusted by centralized control? Start your research here: https://ww.getmonero.org/2017/12/11/A-note-on-fees.html, but keep in mind that 1) "Monero uses high xmr/KB fees in order to prevent blockchain bloat" and 2) "Monero fees fall to almost zero after Bulletproofs upgrade"
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Hueristic
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March 17, 2019, 03:56:22 PM |
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Hi Monero community, I know anonymint spreads misinformation, but before I debate with a user who posted this blog's link in a Lightning Network topic, I would like to know more if the statement quoted, and bolded is true. https://steemit.com/blockchain-scaling/@anonymint/lightning-networks-must-fail-if-it-succeeds Monero’s adaptive block size protocol doesn’t prevent the destruction of the transaction fee market because without the minimum transaction fee periodically adjusted by centralized control (the same @fluffypony centralized control that is recently changing the PoW every ~6 months in a futile attempt to defeat ASICs) promotes the block size to increase so that transaction fees decline to ~0 (i.e. to miners’ negligible incremental costs for adding additional transactions).
Is there a "minimum transaction fee" adjusted by centralized control? He's being disingenuous, sure we added bulletproofs (which had the desired side effect of lower fees) during a scheduled update and we would probably add any safe method to lower fees and or bloat during a scheduled update but calling that centralized is a joke.
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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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