philipma1957
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Activity: 4298
Merit: 8793
'The right to privacy matters'
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August 27, 2014, 04:19:19 PM |
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My tube arrives tomorrow. From reading this thread am I correct in my current assumption that If I don't get a ras pi or Linux machine I have very limited pool choices ie 2 pools? There is no windows or direct mining solution yet?
seems to be this way. I have an account with ghash more to trade then mine guess I will mine there and maybe join the other one mmpool.org I am not anti -pi or anti linux I just have not had time to buy one and learn to use one.
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sidehack
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Curmudgeonly hardware guy
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August 27, 2014, 04:21:50 PM |
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I might mess with it later if I get time. We were looking at tweaking the code for slush's proxy to include a bytelength test and truncation before repacking and forwarding the shares. Worst comes to it, we can look into that again.
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btcshiner
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August 27, 2014, 04:34:42 PM |
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Thanks for the quick replies. I will try BGFMiner tomorrow and see if I can get it to work with Bitminter. If not I will have to go with one of the 2 pool options till I can get a PI in place or another workaround can be implemented.
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sjc1490
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August 27, 2014, 04:39:01 PM |
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I did get BFG to work as a proxy using my s3 as a test on Slush's pool. I downloaded the windows version 4.7 and ran the below cmd line. I just pointed the miner to my computers ip address.
Cd\ cd Bit/BFG bfgminer -o stratum+tcp://stratum.bitcoin.cz:3333 -u xxx.worker2 -p xxxx --stratum-port 3333 --set-device PXY:diff=825
I don't have the actual tube yet but BFG does work as a proxy as sorts so I will try it when it arrives. Maybe sidehack can download BFG 4.7 and give it a try when he gets a chance.
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BTC ADDRESS: 12Qwd8VKLQ4xF44ytHXBpCAKuF9VknG4X2
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sidehack
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Curmudgeonly hardware guy
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August 27, 2014, 04:41:46 PM |
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I'll look into it later this afternoon. There's probably enough demand for it to make it worthwhile. I try to avoid BFG in general but unless we want to recode slush proxy that might be the easiest option.
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xrobau
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Open Source Developer, Hardware Supplier
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August 27, 2014, 05:56:59 PM |
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There's a REASONABLY good chance that filtering them through LeaseRig's LR3 proxy will sanitize and fix this issue, too. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=544732.0
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whonesta
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August 27, 2014, 06:32:06 PM Last edit: August 27, 2014, 07:02:36 PM by whonesta |
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ALL 10 are built!! I have a new respect and empathy for our friends in China. With only 3 active @ one time the temp in the lab (3000 sqft open space) is sitting @ 40C - 104F so I am literally sweating while turning a screw driver. And after round two announcements I only saved .2 BTC ($100) damn near slave wages. Two things have come to mind; 1st - This is a great way to trim any fat off the old love handles. 2nd - These would be great way to heat a house up to kill bed bugs! Oh yeah all ready looking @ trailers and durable flex hosing Thanks FC & Phasebird I will never forget this experience.
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bitsalame
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Activity: 714
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Preaching the gospel of Satoshi
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August 27, 2014, 07:01:52 PM |
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ALL 10 are built!! I have a new respect and empathy for our friends in China. With only 3 active @ one time the temp in the lab (3000 sqft open space) is sitting @ 40C - 104F so I am literally sweating while turning a screw driver. Two things have come to mind; 1st - This is a great way to trim any fat off the old love handles. 2nd - These would be great way to heat a house up to kill bed bugs! Oh yeah all ready looking @ trailers and durable flex hosing Thanks FC & Phasebird I will never forget this experience. Be careful with dropping sweat on the boards! Sweat is extremely conductive ha!
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whonesta
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August 27, 2014, 07:04:25 PM |
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ALL 10 are built!! I have a new respect and empathy for our friends in China. With only 3 active @ one time the temp in the lab (3000 sqft open space) is sitting @ 40C - 104F so I am literally sweating while turning a screw driver. And after round two announcements I only saved .2 BTC ($100) damn near slave wages. Two things have come to mind; 1st - This is a great way to trim any fat off the old love handles. 2nd - These would be great way to heat a house up to kill bed bugs! Oh yeah all ready looking @ trailers and durable flex hosing Thanks FC & Phasebird I will never forget this experience. Be careful with dropping sweat on the boards! Sweat is extremely conductive ha!
I would say toweling self added a good hour to the process
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wasubii
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August 28, 2014, 06:29:49 AM |
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Has anyone actually calculated that they can make a BTC profit from buying these?
What assumptions did you use about power costs and difficulty increases in order to show a positive ROI?
They are so pretty that i want one, and i may run a couple in winter as a high tech space heater but every way i do the sums this comes out as a loss
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Phasebird
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August 28, 2014, 07:42:21 AM |
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Has anyone actually calculated that they can make a BTC profit from buying these?
What assumptions did you use about power costs and difficulty increases in order to show a positive ROI?
They are so pretty that i want one, and i may run a couple in winter as a high tech space heater but every way i do the sums this comes out as a loss
http://www.iasicminer.com/index.php/action-channel-name-counter here is the calculator for your problem. the english version is temporary un-available but you should easy to do the similar calculation. As our estimate,within 8% avg hashrate growth rate and 0.15 USD/KWH electricity rate, it is def profitable.
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wasubii
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August 28, 2014, 08:02:19 AM |
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Has anyone actually calculated that they can make a BTC profit from buying these?
What assumptions did you use about power costs and difficulty increases in order to show a positive ROI?
They are so pretty that i want one, and i may run a couple in winter as a high tech space heater but every way i do the sums this comes out as a loss
http://www.iasicminer.com/index.php/action-channel-name-counter here is the calculator for your problem. the english version is temporary un-available but you should easy to do the similar calculation. As our estimate,within 8% avg hashrate growth rate and 0.15 USD/KWH electricity rate, it is def profitable. Ok thanks. So you can profit on this device only if the average increases in difficulty is no more than 8% per change. Dont think il be wasting my BTC on mining gear anytime soon then. Maybe il pick up one of these when they are considered defunct.
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jjdub7
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August 28, 2014, 09:44:58 AM |
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Has anyone actually calculated that they can make a BTC profit from buying these?
What assumptions did you use about power costs and difficulty increases in order to show a positive ROI?
They are so pretty that i want one, and i may run a couple in winter as a high tech space heater but every way i do the sums this comes out as a loss
http://www.iasicminer.com/index.php/action-channel-name-counter here is the calculator for your problem. the english version is temporary un-available but you should easy to do the similar calculation. As our estimate,within 8% avg hashrate growth rate and 0.15 USD/KWH electricity rate, it is def profitable. How about Bitfountain steps up and revamps the website with whatever suite they used for theirs. Are they still the majority shareholder?
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redsn0w
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#Free market
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August 28, 2014, 09:48:37 AM |
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I'll look into it later this afternoon. There's probably enough demand for it to make it worthwhile. I try to avoid BFG in general but unless we want to recode slush proxy that might be the easiest option.
Hi @Sidehck , Do you took some pictures of your miner ? I'd like to see it at works . Thanks again .
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Phasebird
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Activity: 47
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August 28, 2014, 10:11:13 AM |
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Has anyone actually calculated that they can make a BTC profit from buying these?
What assumptions did you use about power costs and difficulty increases in order to show a positive ROI?
They are so pretty that i want one, and i may run a couple in winter as a high tech space heater but every way i do the sums this comes out as a loss
http://www.iasicminer.com/index.php/action-channel-name-counter here is the calculator for your problem. the english version is temporary un-available but you should easy to do the similar calculation. As our estimate,within 8% avg hashrate growth rate and 0.15 USD/KWH electricity rate, it is def profitable. How about Bitfountain steps up and revamps the website with whatever suite they used for theirs. Are they still the majority shareholder? hehe ,sry. iasicminer.com is mainly for chinese buyers since a big part of them do not even know bitcointalk. For international buyers, we mainly rely on official sale thread post by FC as we used to do ,so that the english version hasnt been well improved so far.
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WBF1
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August 28, 2014, 03:02:13 PM |
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So I can run 2 tubes from 1 Ethernet/controller yes?
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Collider
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August 28, 2014, 03:07:18 PM |
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So I can run 2 tubes from 1 Ethernet/controller yes?
yes, the question is if you want to, as you have to interconnect the two and always keep them next to each other.
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xhomerx10
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August 28, 2014, 03:57:44 PM |
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So I can run 2 tubes from 1 Ethernet/controller yes?
yes, the question is if you want to, as you have to interconnect the two and always keep them next to each other. I thought there were three connectors per controller? Obviously at some point they would require interconnection but not for two... I will know for sure as soon as I get mine!
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CanaryInTheMine
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between a rock and a block!
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August 28, 2014, 04:16:49 PM Last edit: August 28, 2014, 04:37:23 PM by CanaryInTheMine |
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So I can run 2 tubes from 1 Ethernet/controller yes?
you can run 4 full tubes with 1 controller Edit: sorry folks, was thinking 8, but typed 4. 1 controller can run 8 tubes.
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sidehack
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Curmudgeonly hardware guy
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August 28, 2014, 04:24:32 PM |
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8 Tubes? Each Tube is given a 5-bit address, which covers 0-31 so 32 blades at 4 per Tube makes 8 Tubes.
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