skayl (OP)
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March 20, 2012, 07:56:46 PM Last edit: February 18, 2013, 12:50:18 AM by skayl |
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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March 20, 2012, 08:07:44 PM |
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why would difficulty be doubling by the end of the year?
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Global BTC
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March 20, 2012, 08:09:41 PM |
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Payout halves, it's essentially the same thing as difficulty doubling: You only earn half as many coins with the same hashing power.
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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March 20, 2012, 08:25:55 PM |
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with one critical difference ...
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Kluge
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March 21, 2012, 03:49:05 AM |
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And the difference (other than terminology)?
Many GPU miners will likely drop out, so difficulty should decrease.
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Kluge
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March 21, 2012, 04:09:55 AM |
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And the difference (other than terminology)?
Many GPU miners will likely drop out, so difficulty should decrease. In exchange for FPGAs? Maybe a few, but the MH/$ of FPGAs (along with other issues in buying FPGAs) is probably low enough to shove a lot of people out altogether. Casual miners in particular -- people who would otherwise only use their graphics cards for gaming, will probably notice that even with reasonable electricity rates (~$.11/KWh) would be losing a significant amount mining BTC. I'd think it reasonable to assume difficulty will drop "a bit" (10-20% within a month of block reward halving), so I very much doubt the revenues from mining will effectively halve when block reward drops.
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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March 21, 2012, 01:12:12 PM |
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The difference I was alluding to is that difficulty changes don't affect supply.
Difficulty = 1 or Difficulty =1 million or Difficulty = eleventy quadrillion supply is still 50 * 6 * 24 = 7200 BTC per day.
50% drop in supply rate does mean miners make less in BTC terms but there is also less new supply making it to exchanges which should be bullish to prices.
Given the choice of difficulty doubling OR reward being cut in half I would take the later anyday.
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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March 21, 2012, 03:15:29 PM |
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There is no poll but there is a thread.
Power in US can range from $0.20 per kWh down to about $0.05 per kWh. I think the DOE says the average is $0.12 per kWh.
If you were going to create a co-location warehouse I would imagine the Northwest would be a good spot. Some areas have cheap power and they also have mild summers, and low risk of natural disasters (would suck to have a tornado rip the roof off your warehouse and eat $100K in rigs).
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Skrivitor
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March 22, 2012, 07:34:18 PM |
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Two Things
1. Talked to kidgorgeous on the forum about a warehouse in West Palm Beach that he was putting up for a bitcoin mining project. Power cost was .11 per kwh. Has anybody talked to any other commercial real estate people on the forum who would be willing to take a share of revenue in exchange for unused warehouse space. I mean there has got to be a cheap place to rent in Nevada or FLorida where the market is extremely depressed that would love to have a project like this.
2. We could fund part of the thing on kickstarter with the rewards being paid out in bitcoin. Thoughts?
I live in Parksville, British Columbia. Our electricity is from Hydroelectric dams in very sustainable locations (those areas of Vancouver Island receive precipitation measured in meters/year) which makes our rates very low. The first 1332 kWh are $0.0662CAD/kWh above that is $0.0962CAD/kWh. Our local economy is based on Retirement income and tourism. There are a lot of empty warehouse spaces with rates as low as $5/sqft. Internet is available for around $50/month. I would even consider renting some of my garage space or rack space in my server/utility room. I would be interested in building some Gigahashes and providing any support I can. My job is designing electronics (Schematic Capture and PCB Layout) for the Aviation and Oilfield industries. I have two Radeon 6870s and plan on expanding into FPGA with a Butterfly Labs Single.
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ELT
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March 22, 2012, 07:46:11 PM |
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If there is serious talk then some investment may be on the way. It might be hard to get something like this passed on kickstarter but I don't think it would be impossible, just my opinion.
ELT
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alatus
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March 22, 2012, 08:14:47 PM |
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Why Kickstarter, why not GLBSE? Just curious... (And interested...)
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Skrivitor
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March 22, 2012, 08:17:24 PM |
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Why Kickstarter, why not GLBSE? Just curious... (And interested...)
+1, GLBSE is a much more practical way to raise funds.
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RaggedMonk
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March 22, 2012, 08:33:24 PM |
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Kickstarter is limited to only creative project. Indiegogo might be an effective way of raising funds (with credit cards) to buy equipment to generate bitcoin.
I think GLBSE is still too confusing to be usable. Hopefully the rumored upcoming 2.0 will be clearer.
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PatrickHarnett
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March 22, 2012, 08:47:29 PM |
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Iceland would be interesting as there is a severe currency exchange restriction in place (around $3000/yr when I last read about it). Might be ok as a limit for John Doe but for multinational corporations it bites.
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Global BTC
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March 22, 2012, 11:20:05 PM |
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If you can find someone who will shop for you in Sweden, shipping stuff to Iceland from there is quite cheap.
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Bitbird
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April 09, 2012, 03:55:44 PM |
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@models What kind of model would you need? Could you give more description? Thanks!
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ThePanCakeKid95
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April 09, 2012, 06:52:36 PM |
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Well I personally think this is an amazing idea, if we could get a large amount of mini rig's together we might just have something. In Ohio we get about 0.07 per kilowatt hour which from what i hear is better than most states. This is an idea we need to explore. I personally think kickstarter would be a great idea, the only thing is they state you can't use it to start a company. So Maybe we could make it sound more like a never ending operation, which it is. Ideas?
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Bitbird
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April 12, 2012, 03:14:53 PM |
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How about build a "almost free" mining data center? I knew a guy who can build wind turbines with fairly low costs in my country. His design could producing up to 650 kw·h per month per turbine by the report.
The point is: with appropriate seed/VC funds for the further RD and mass production, "almost free" mining operation could be possible.
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