Bitcoin Magazine (OP)
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April 29, 2014, 11:36:31 PM Last edit: April 30, 2014, 12:48:08 AM by Bitcoin Magazine |
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then no one will have to work
edit: holy shit money is free!!
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i am here.
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durrrr
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April 29, 2014, 11:44:13 PM |
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what happens when bitcoin is all mined up? you paid an extra 30-40k for a house that now wont sell for more than 5 lol seriously this is redicuous
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Malin Keshar
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April 30, 2014, 12:27:38 AM |
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hardware gets obsolete easily, and mining gets less and less profitable every day.
But might be a good think to keep in your house warm if you live in Siberia or in the North Pole
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Soros Shorts
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April 30, 2014, 12:44:01 AM |
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Hopefully in the near future when mining has become marginally profitable then 20nm hashing chips would be commodity hardware that you can buy in bulk on DigiKey. You can then build your house with electric heaters that hash. You probably won't make a profit but you'd help guaranteed that mining remains decentralized.
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hellscabane
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April 30, 2014, 03:23:55 AM |
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Hopefully in the near future when mining has become marginally profitable then 20nm hashing chips would be commodity hardware that you can buy in bulk on DigiKey. You can then build your house with electric heaters that hash. You probably won't make a profit but you'd help guaranteed that mining remains decentralized.
Heck, why not right? I mean if there was a way to turn mining units in to heating systems that use up just marginally more electricity than normal heaters, that'd be pretty neat. That'd create a very interesting paradigm wouldn't it? [Then again, I could just be talking crazy...]
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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April 30, 2014, 03:26:37 AM |
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Miners use no more electricity than an electric heater. 100% of the electrical energy "used" by the miner is converted to thermal energy (heat). Of course in most places there are more cost effective methods of heating a house such as natural gas furnace, propane, or heat pump.
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skooter
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April 30, 2014, 03:57:21 AM |
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Miners use no more electricity than an electric heater. 100% of the electrical energy "used" by the miner is converted to thermal energy (heat). Of course in most places there are more cost effective methods of heating a house such as natural gas furnace, propane, or heat pump.
Yeah, except the wiring used in an electric heater are a hell of a lot cheaper then making a bunch of ASIC chips.
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counter
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April 30, 2014, 05:12:40 AM |
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I just heard they are upping the price of electricity so we better get a move on this before they make the rates to high to even mine.
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Dannie
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April 30, 2014, 05:25:22 AM |
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Miners use no more electricity than an electric heater. 100% of the electrical energy "used" by the miner is converted to thermal energy (heat). Of course in most places there are more cost effective methods of heating a house such as natural gas furnace, propane, or heat pump.
Yeah, except the wiring used in an electric heater are a hell of a lot cheaper then making a bunch of ASIC chips. But your electric heater doesn't look as cool as a miner, right?
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poordeveloper
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April 30, 2014, 07:12:32 AM |
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Miners use no more electricity than an electric heater. 100% of the electrical energy "used" by the miner is converted to thermal energy (heat). Of course in most places there are more cost effective methods of heating a house such as natural gas furnace, propane, or heat pump.
Yeah, except the wiring used in an electric heater are a hell of a lot cheaper then making a bunch of ASIC chips. But your electric heater doesn't look as cool as a miner, right? Not sure it's worth it though
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hellscabane
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April 30, 2014, 03:10:51 PM |
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Miners use no more electricity than an electric heater. 100% of the electrical energy "used" by the miner is converted to thermal energy (heat). Of course in most places there are more cost effective methods of heating a house such as natural gas furnace, propane, or heat pump.
True, and as you say, the electricity draw is only equivalent (well, for the most part) to a space heater in terms of "heating" up a space (in fact, I think a website did a study on this). If there was a way of having multiple sources of heat through mining (having small miners embedded in different locations with fans circulating the heat, or some sort of schematic like that), and the system's electricity draw is at (or just marginally more) than the electricity draw of one of those houses with the more efficient electric heating systems, that'd be awesome.
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Peter R
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April 30, 2014, 03:25:52 PM Last edit: April 30, 2014, 03:35:59 PM by Peter R |
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Miners use no more electricity than an electric heater. 100% of the electrical energy "used" by the miner is converted to thermal energy (heat). Of course in most places there are more cost effective methods of heating a house such as natural gas furnace, propane, or heat pump.
True, and as you say, the electricity draw is only equivalent (well, for the most part) to a space heater in terms of "heating" up a space (in fact, I think a website did a study on this). If there was a way of having multiple sources of heat through mining (having small miners embedded in different locations with fans circulating the heat, or some sort of schematic like that), and the system's electricity draw is at (or just marginally more) than the electricity draw of one of those houses with the more efficient electric heating systems, that'd be awesome. I think we will see bitcoin miners used as heaters moving forward in time. It all comes down to how one can heat his home most cost-effectively. The majority of apartment buildings and even many smaller houses in my area use electric baseboard heaters. These devices perform the following conversion: 1 kW of electrical power -> 1 kW of heat. Imagine making a new device that instead performs this conversion: 1 kW of electrical power -> 1 kW of heat + X bitcoins / day Which device would a rational economic actor choose to heat your home? The answer is that he would choose the bitcoin heater if the extra cost he pays overtop of the price of the simple heater is less than the revenue he expects to earn from mining.
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Malin Keshar
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April 30, 2014, 03:59:04 PM |
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Miners use no more electricity than an electric heater. 100% of the electrical energy "used" by the miner is converted to thermal energy (heat). Of course in most places there are more cost effective methods of heating a house such as natural gas furnace, propane, or heat pump.
True, and as you say, the electricity draw is only equivalent (well, for the most part) to a space heater in terms of "heating" up a space (in fact, I think a website did a study on this). If there was a way of having multiple sources of heat through mining (having small miners embedded in different locations with fans circulating the heat, or some sort of schematic like that), and the system's electricity draw is at (or just marginally more) than the electricity draw of one of those houses with the more efficient electric heating systems, that'd be awesome. I think we will see bitcoin miners used as heaters moving forward in time. It all comes down to how one can heat his home most cost-effectively. The majority of apartment buildings and even many smaller houses in my area use electric baseboard heaters. These devices perform the following conversion: 1 kW of electrical power -> 1 kW of heat. Imagine making a new device that instead performs this conversion: 1 kW of electrical power -> 1 kW of heat + X bitcoins / day Which device would a rational economic actor choose to heat your home? The answer is that he would choose the bitcoin heater if the extra cost he pays overtop of the price of the simple heater is less than the revenue he expects to earn from mining. Heater = simple resistor with some protection for people don't get toasted. Super simple and cheap to produce. Mining ring = computers with lots of hard to produce, failure prone and expensive components, like gpus and ASICs. I think only people already prone to buy miners would consider using then also as heaters
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Peter R
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April 30, 2014, 04:07:49 PM |
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Heater = simple resistor with some protection for people don't get toasted. Super simple and cheap to produce. Mining ring = computers with lots of hard to produce, failure prone and expensive components, like gpus and ASICs.
So you agree with me. If electrical "mining" heaters can't be made cheap, reliable and easy enough, then there would be no economic advantage to using one in place of a simple electric heater so then they won't be used. I think only people already prone to buy miners would consider using then also as heaters
If the mining-heaters can be made cheap, reliable and simple such that using them saves money, then of course people would install them. Do you think the average person knows how a heat pump works? It all comes down to what is most cost effective. I have no interest in hand-waving debates about "what will be most cost effective in various scenarios at some distant point in the future" as we'll both likely be wrong.
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hellscabane
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April 30, 2014, 05:33:30 PM |
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Heater = simple resistor with some protection for people don't get toasted. Super simple and cheap to produce. Mining ring = computers with lots of hard to produce, failure prone and expensive components, like gpus and ASICs.
So you agree with me. If electrical "mining" heaters can't be made cheap, reliable and easy enough, then there would be no economic advantage to using one in place of a simple electric heater so then they won't be used. I think only people already prone to buy miners would consider using then also as heaters
If the mining-heaters can be made cheap, reliable and simple such that using them saves money, then of course people would install them. Do you think the average person knows how a heat pump works? It all comes down to what is most cost effective. I have no interest in hand-waving debates about "what will be most cost effective in various scenarios at some distant point in the future" as we'll both likely be wrong. In any case, it'll be cool to have the option for a bitcoin mining heating solution in the future.
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SherdonIke
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April 30, 2014, 05:50:10 PM |
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mining gets less profitable every day. If all of us start including bitcoin miners in houses as amenities, it will not bring us any bitcoins at all!
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poordeveloper
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April 30, 2014, 06:09:05 PM |
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mining gets less profitable every day. If all of us start including bitcoin miners in houses as amenities, it will not bring us any bitcoins at all!
They will be unprofitable investments indeed. I doubt it will ever be worth it to do this.
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Nagle
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April 30, 2014, 06:28:06 PM |
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Some people haven't been reading the difficulty graph.
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Bitcoin Magazine (OP)
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April 30, 2014, 08:19:21 PM |
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what if we made the amenities wireless and charged a monthly fee
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i am here.
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troy112
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April 30, 2014, 08:23:03 PM |
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Amenities . Do you thing owner is a crazy or stupid for installing hardware worth thousands. And what about other problems like electricity, heating, mentainance.
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