Bitcoin Forum
May 06, 2024, 08:38:31 PM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 27.0 [Torrent]
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register More  
Poll
Question: Will you be switching to ASIC?
I own non-BFL FPGA and I'm switching to BFL ASIC
I own non-BFL FPGA and I'm waiting to switch to non-BFL ASIC
I own BFL FPGA and I'm switching to BFL ASIC
I own BFL FPGA and I'm waiting to switch to non-BFL ASIC
I own GPUs, and I'm switching to BFL ASIC
I own GPUs, and I'm waiting to switch to non-BFL ASIC
I am quitting mining
Other
I will continue mining with my GPUs
I will continue mining with my FPGAs

Pages: 1 2 3 4 [All]
  Print  
Author Topic: [Poll]Will you be switching to ASIC?  (Read 7125 times)
AzN1337c0d3r (OP)
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 238
Merit: 100

★YoBit.Net★ 350+ Coins Exchange & Dice


View Profile
July 07, 2012, 06:07:53 AM
 #1

If other, please post what you are planning to do.

1715027911
Hero Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 1715027911

View Profile Personal Message (Offline)

Ignore
1715027911
Reply with quote  #2

1715027911
Report to moderator
1715027911
Hero Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 1715027911

View Profile Personal Message (Offline)

Ignore
1715027911
Reply with quote  #2

1715027911
Report to moderator
1715027911
Hero Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 1715027911

View Profile Personal Message (Offline)

Ignore
1715027911
Reply with quote  #2

1715027911
Report to moderator
Advertised sites are not endorsed by the Bitcoin Forum. They may be unsafe, untrustworthy, or illegal in your jurisdiction.
1715027911
Hero Member
*
Offline Offline

Posts: 1715027911

View Profile Personal Message (Offline)

Ignore
1715027911
Reply with quote  #2

1715027911
Report to moderator
bravetheheat
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 457
Merit: 251


View Profile
July 07, 2012, 06:59:25 AM
 #2

It seems that the only options are to switch to BFL, or other. Perhaps you can add option(s) of continuing to use stated device (whether they be GPU, or FPGA)?
SaintFlow
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 476
Merit: 250


The first is by definition not flawed.


View Profile
July 07, 2012, 07:09:01 AM
 #3

I will sit this one out and see how well they are really doing.
Perhaps even sit out how things behave around the halfing of reward.

By then I will be able to have an informed opinion about the difficulty and assumed
profitability.

In the meantime i might up the amount of shares of cognitive mining (GLBSE) since they
will be among the first adopters.

don't let me make you question your assumptions
AzN1337c0d3r (OP)
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 238
Merit: 100

★YoBit.Net★ 350+ Coins Exchange & Dice


View Profile
July 07, 2012, 07:21:44 AM
 #4

It seems that the only options are to switch to BFL, or other. Perhaps you can add option(s) of continuing to use stated device (whether they be GPU, or FPGA)?

Added

kentrolla
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 1554
Merit: 565


Eloncoin.org - Mars, here we come!


View Profile WWW
July 07, 2012, 03:32:46 PM
 #5

wheres are the options "i dont have gpu's or fpga's but i plan on buying BFL-asic or non-BFL-asic"?









▄▄████████▄▄
▄▄████████████████▄▄
▄██
████████████████████▄
▄███
██████████████████████▄
▄████
███████████████████████▄
███████████████████████▄
█████████████████▄███████
████████████████▄███████▀
██████████▄▄███▄██████▀
████████▄████▄█████▀▀
██████▄██████████▀
███▄▄█████
███████▄
██▄██████████████
░▄██████████████▀
▄█████████████▀
████████████
███████████▀
███████▀▀
.
▄▄███████▄▄
▄███████████████▄
▄███████████████████▄
▄██████████
███████████
▄███████████████████████▄
█████████████████████████
█████████████████████████
█████████████████████████
▀█
██████████████████████▀
▀██
███████████████████▀
▀███████████████████▀
▀█████████
██████▀
▀▀███████▀▀
.
 ElonCoin.org 
.
████████▄▄███████▄▄
███████▄████████████▌
██████▐██▀███████▀▀██
███████████████████▐█▌
████▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄██▄▄▄▄▄
███▐███▀▄█▄█▀▀█▄█▄▀
███████████████████
█████████████▄████
█████████▀░▄▄▄▄▄
███████▄█▄░▀█▄▄░▀
███▄██▄▀███▄█████▄▀
▄██████▄▀███████▀
████████▄▀████▀
█████▄▄
.
"I could either watch it
happen or be a part of it"
▬▬▬▬▬
BR0KK
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 784
Merit: 500



View Profile
July 07, 2012, 06:15:19 PM
 #6

Ill Stick to my current fpgas .....AMD ill invest  into glbse Wink

AzN1337c0d3r (OP)
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 238
Merit: 100

★YoBit.Net★ 350+ Coins Exchange & Dice


View Profile
July 08, 2012, 02:07:42 PM
 #7

wheres are the options "i dont have gpu's or fpga's but i plan on buying BFL-asic or non-BFL-asic"?

You won't be "switching" then.

tatsuchan
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 182
Merit: 100



View Profile
July 08, 2012, 03:58:23 PM
 #8

ASIC's will kill the casual miner. That's my opinion. It might take a year to pay off equipment, then each $150 basic asic might take another year to make $125. It wont be worth it without hundreds of thousands of dollars tied into it over years at a time.  This is part of btc goin mainstream.
BR0KK
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 784
Merit: 500



View Profile
July 08, 2012, 05:12:05 PM
 #9

I'm curious to see what a 3.5 gh jalapeño will earn per month.....


BlackPrapor
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 628
Merit: 504



View Profile WWW
July 08, 2012, 05:50:11 PM
 #10

I'm curious to see what a 3.5 gh jalapeño will earn per month.....



Around $37, for the first few months I guess

There is no place like 127.0.0.1
In blockchain we trust
mokahless
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 471
Merit: 256



View Profile
July 08, 2012, 05:53:50 PM
 #11

I intend to keep GPU mining in addition to a BFL J ASIC. My goal is 1GH/s for GPUs. Currently at 0.8GH/s.

BlackPrapor
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 628
Merit: 504



View Profile WWW
July 08, 2012, 06:19:19 PM
 #12

I intend to keep GPU mining in addition to a BFL J ASIC. My goal is 1GH/s for GPUs. Currently at 0.8GH/s.

Are you going to heat your house, or water? Because otherwise it will be just a waste of electricity. Basically everyone who's planning to continue with either GPUs or FPGAs can be placed in "quit mining" section.

There is no place like 127.0.0.1
In blockchain we trust
BR0KK
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 784
Merit: 500



View Profile
July 08, 2012, 06:21:02 PM
 #13

I'm curious to see what a 3.5 gh jalapeño will earn per month.....



Around $37, for the first few months I guess
Got to be more ?

For the first month but after the release of th units and when the dust settles .... 3.5 gh will be nothing at all (or am I wrong)

mokahless
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 471
Merit: 256



View Profile
July 08, 2012, 06:24:47 PM
 #14

I intend to keep GPU mining in addition to a BFL J ASIC. My goal is 1GH/s for GPUs. Currently at 0.8GH/s.

Are you going to heat your house, or water? Because otherwise it will be just a waste of electricity. Basically everyone who's planning to continue with either GPUs or FPGAs can be placed in "quit mining" section.
That's your opinion.

BlackPrapor
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 628
Merit: 504



View Profile WWW
July 08, 2012, 07:18:48 PM
 #15

I intend to keep GPU mining in addition to a BFL J ASIC. My goal is 1GH/s for GPUs. Currently at 0.8GH/s.

Are you going to heat your house, or water? Because otherwise it will be just a waste of electricity. Basically everyone who's planning to continue with either GPUs or FPGAs can be placed in "quit mining" section.
That's your opinion.
I usually do the math before I spell out numbers here. I'm >85% confident that GPUs will be useless within 1,5-2 month time after the first ASICs are out. FPGA will stay profitable, but ROI will be like 20+ years, or around 10 years if you got free electricity Smiley). The only way for GPU to be still profitable, is for btc to be $10+, and if you want to have same revenue as today, then it should be at $65+.

There is no place like 127.0.0.1
In blockchain we trust
BlackPrapor
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 628
Merit: 504



View Profile WWW
July 08, 2012, 07:22:27 PM
 #16

I'm curious to see what a 3.5 gh jalapeño will earn per month.....



Around $37, for the first few months I guess
Got to be more ?

For the first month but after the release of th units and when the dust settles .... 3.5 gh will be nothing at all (or am I wrong)
No one knows how much you can get the first month, except BFL guys Smiley). Difficulty is a bit easier to estimate, but revenue also depends on your order position...

There is no place like 127.0.0.1
In blockchain we trust
Gabi
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1148
Merit: 1008


If you want to walk on water, get out of the boat


View Profile
July 08, 2012, 07:26:45 PM
 #17

ASIC's will kill the casual miner. That's my opinion. It might take a year to pay off equipment, then each $150 basic asic might take another year to make $125. It wont be worth it without hundreds of thousands of dollars tied into it over years at a time.  This is part of btc goin mainstream.
Ahahahah, this is bullshit.

mokahless
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 471
Merit: 256



View Profile
July 08, 2012, 08:09:00 PM
 #18

I intend to keep GPU mining in addition to a BFL J ASIC. My goal is 1GH/s for GPUs. Currently at 0.8GH/s.

Are you going to heat your house, or water? Because otherwise it will be just a waste of electricity. Basically everyone who's planning to continue with either GPUs or FPGAs can be placed in "quit mining" section.
That's your opinion.
I usually do the math before I spell out numbers here. I'm >85% confident that GPUs will be useless within 1,5-2 month time after the first ASICs are out. FPGA will stay profitable, but ROI will be like 20+ years, or around 10 years if you got free electricity Smiley). The only way for GPU to be still profitable, is for btc to be $10+, and if you want to have same revenue as today, then it should be at $65+.

So you were able to take into account all factors of my personal situation in your calculations? Impressive.

But yeah, thanks for elaborating. The unpredictability of the future is what makes me hesitant to invest much. I'm currently only purchasing equipment that has an ROI of <3 months at current exchange rate. That limits me to some used video cards and using only the motherboards I currently have on hand. There's no way I could build a new system or even source a full system of spare parts on kijiji with that kind of ROI currently.

I can't disagree that what you are saying is a possibility but... BFL always seemed to have long wait times and slow production and shipping. I think your ideas won't come to pass for a while. Unless perhaps they were only doing low-volume before to test the market? Then there is the unpredictability of the bitcoin value.

BlackPrapor
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 628
Merit: 504



View Profile WWW
July 08, 2012, 09:11:46 PM
 #19

I didn't take your personal options. I took the best brand new GPU based system bought directly from China and electricity costs of $0,035/kW. The best 'I' can get atm. Regardless of whether BFL ship in time, eventually they will.

There is no place like 127.0.0.1
In blockchain we trust
juggalodarkclow
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 980
Merit: 1000



View Profile
July 08, 2012, 09:20:37 PM
 #20

I'll be switching my gpu's over to LTC when my 8 jalapenos arrive

dropt
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1512
Merit: 1000



View Profile
July 08, 2012, 10:01:43 PM
 #21

My intentions are to mine my GPU's and BFL FPGA's into the ground until the bitter end (read: not-profitable).  Once/If this point has come, I'll just shut-down entirely until BFL's deadline for the trade-up program approaches. I'll re-evaluate the current mining market at that point and act accordingly.

If I do switch to ASIC: I'll upgrade my two singles but will probably wait for further purchases until there's a competitor on the market.  While BFL's products are arguably the best out there, I have great reservations about supporting them any further.  It's commonly said that the power is with the consumer as one can always vote with their wallet. Outside the upgrade, until they start operating like a proper respectable business, I'll take my money elsewhere.

dropt
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1512
Merit: 1000



View Profile
July 08, 2012, 10:04:26 PM
 #22

Ahahahah, this is bullshit.

While I respect your opinion, I think you're dead wrong.
BR0KK
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 784
Merit: 500



View Profile
July 08, 2012, 10:05:22 PM
 #23

My intentions are to mine my GPU's and BFL FPGA's into the ground until the bitter end (read: not-profitable).  Once/If this point has come, I'll just shut-down entirely until BFL's deadline for the trade-up program approaches. I'll re-evaluate the current mining market at that point and act accordingly.

If I do switch to ASIC: I'll upgrade my two singles but will probably wait for further purchases until there's a competitor on the market.  While BFL's products are arguably the best out there, I have great reservations about supporting them any further.  It's commonly said that the power is with the consumer as one can always vote with their wallet. Outside the upgrade, until they start operating like a proper respectable business, I'll take my money elsewhere.



signed Cheesy

Since i do not own singles.... none from BFL.... ill mine with my Ztex cluster till the end. If by then, there is a competitor towards BFL ill have to evaluate what ill do.Sad

AndrewBUD
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 1078
Merit: 502



View Profile WWW
July 08, 2012, 10:06:51 PM
 #24

I'll continue to mine, I don't pay for power..... wait and see how things pan out.... Smiley


▄▄▄███████▄▄▄
▄▄█████▀▀''`▀▀█████▄▄
▄███P'            `YY██▄
▄██P'                  `Y██▄
███'                      `███
███'                         ███
▄██'   ▄█████▄▄  ,▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄p   ███
▄██▀  ,████▀P▀███.`██████████P   ▀██▄
███[ ,████ __. ███.   ,▄████▀    ███
███[ ]████████████[  ▄████▀       ███
███[ `████   ,oo2 ▄████▀'       ,███
▀██▄  `████▄▄█████d███████████   ▄██▀
▀██.   `▀▀▀▀▀▀"  Y▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀  ,██▀
███.                        ,███
▀██▄                      ▄██▀
▀███▄_                 ,███▀
▀███▄▄_          _▄▄███▀
▀▀████▄▄ooo▄▄█████▀
▀▀███████▀▀'

365

TM

EZ365 is a digital ecosystem that combines
the best aspects of online gaming, cryptocurrency
trading
and blockchain education. ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀

..WHITEPAPER..    ..INVESTOR PITCH..

.Telegram     Twitter   Facebook

                       .'M████▀▀██  ██
                      W█Ws'V██  ██▄▄███▀▀█
                     i█████m.~M████▀▀██  ███
                     d███████Ws'V██  ██████
                     ****M██████m.~███f~~__mW█
          ██▀▀▀████████=  Y██▀▀██W ,gm███████
      g█████▄▄▄██   █A~`_WW Y█  ██!,████████
   g▀▀▀███   ████▀▀`_m████i!████P W███  ██
 _███▄▄▄██▀▀▀███Af`_m███   █W ███A ]███  ██
__ ~~~▀▀▀▀▄▄▄█*f_m██████   ██i!██!i███████
Y█████▄▄▄▄__. i██▀▀▀██████████ █!,██████
 8█  █▀▀█████.!██   ██████████i! █████
 '█  █  █   █W M█▄▄▄██████   ██ !██
  !███▄▄█   ██i'██████████   ██
   Y███████████.]██████████████
   █   ███████b ███   ██████
   Y   █   █▀▀█i!██   ████
    V███   █  █W Y█████
      ~~▀███▄▄▄█['███
            ~~*██

Play

            │
    │      ███
    │      ███
    │      ███
    │   │  ███
   ███  │  ███
   ███ ███ ███
 │  ███ ███ ███
███ ███ ███ ███
███ ███  │   │
███ ███  │   │
 │   │
 │

Trade

           __▄▄████▄▄
     __▄▄███████████████▄▄▄
 _▄▄█████████▀▀~`,▄████████████▄▄▄
 ~▀▀████▀▀~`,_▄▄███████████████▀▀▀
   d█~  =▀███████████████▀▀
   ]█! m▄▄ '~▀▀▀████▀▀~~ ,_▄▄
  ,W█. *████▄▄__ '  __▄▄█████
  !██P  █████████████████████
   W█. - ██████████████████▀
  i██[   ~ ▀▀█████████▀▀▀
 g███!
Y███

Learn
[/tabl
Cablez
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1400
Merit: 1000


I owe my soul to the Bitcoin code...


View Profile
July 08, 2012, 10:22:53 PM
 #25

I'll continue to mine, I don't pay for power..... wait and see how things pan out.... Smiley

Yeah, but how can you compete with a 10fold difficulty? I mean, say you have 20GH now, by then you will make roughly 1 BTC a day and that is without the reward halving.  There is just no way to justify the costs.

Tired of substandard power distribution in your ASIC setup???   Chris' Custom Cablez will get you sorted out right!  No job too hard so PM me for a quote
Check my products or ask a question here: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=74397.0
AndrewBUD
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 1078
Merit: 502



View Profile WWW
July 08, 2012, 11:44:27 PM
 #26

Like I said... I'll wait it out and see how it pans out..... Not going to quit now because something might happen........ this is a hobby for me.. Something fun to tinker with when I am not working...


What's goign to happen if BFL releases their asic and they only perform at 10% of advertised speeds?  I'll see it when I believe it Tongue



▄▄▄███████▄▄▄
▄▄█████▀▀''`▀▀█████▄▄
▄███P'            `YY██▄
▄██P'                  `Y██▄
███'                      `███
███'                         ███
▄██'   ▄█████▄▄  ,▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄p   ███
▄██▀  ,████▀P▀███.`██████████P   ▀██▄
███[ ,████ __. ███.   ,▄████▀    ███
███[ ]████████████[  ▄████▀       ███
███[ `████   ,oo2 ▄████▀'       ,███
▀██▄  `████▄▄█████d███████████   ▄██▀
▀██.   `▀▀▀▀▀▀"  Y▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀  ,██▀
███.                        ,███
▀██▄                      ▄██▀
▀███▄_                 ,███▀
▀███▄▄_          _▄▄███▀
▀▀████▄▄ooo▄▄█████▀
▀▀███████▀▀'

365

TM

EZ365 is a digital ecosystem that combines
the best aspects of online gaming, cryptocurrency
trading
and blockchain education. ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀

..WHITEPAPER..    ..INVESTOR PITCH..

.Telegram     Twitter   Facebook

                       .'M████▀▀██  ██
                      W█Ws'V██  ██▄▄███▀▀█
                     i█████m.~M████▀▀██  ███
                     d███████Ws'V██  ██████
                     ****M██████m.~███f~~__mW█
          ██▀▀▀████████=  Y██▀▀██W ,gm███████
      g█████▄▄▄██   █A~`_WW Y█  ██!,████████
   g▀▀▀███   ████▀▀`_m████i!████P W███  ██
 _███▄▄▄██▀▀▀███Af`_m███   █W ███A ]███  ██
__ ~~~▀▀▀▀▄▄▄█*f_m██████   ██i!██!i███████
Y█████▄▄▄▄__. i██▀▀▀██████████ █!,██████
 8█  █▀▀█████.!██   ██████████i! █████
 '█  █  █   █W M█▄▄▄██████   ██ !██
  !███▄▄█   ██i'██████████   ██
   Y███████████.]██████████████
   █   ███████b ███   ██████
   Y   █   █▀▀█i!██   ████
    V███   █  █W Y█████
      ~~▀███▄▄▄█['███
            ~~*██

Play

            │
    │      ███
    │      ███
    │      ███
    │   │  ███
   ███  │  ███
   ███ ███ ███
 │  ███ ███ ███
███ ███ ███ ███
███ ███  │   │
███ ███  │   │
 │   │
 │

Trade

           __▄▄████▄▄
     __▄▄███████████████▄▄▄
 _▄▄█████████▀▀~`,▄████████████▄▄▄
 ~▀▀████▀▀~`,_▄▄███████████████▀▀▀
   d█~  =▀███████████████▀▀
   ]█! m▄▄ '~▀▀▀████▀▀~~ ,_▄▄
  ,W█. *████▄▄__ '  __▄▄█████
  !██P  █████████████████████
   W█. - ██████████████████▀
  i██[   ~ ▀▀█████████▀▀▀
 g███!
Y███

Learn
[/tabl
Cablez
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1400
Merit: 1000


I owe my soul to the Bitcoin code...


View Profile
July 09, 2012, 03:14:18 AM
 #27

True, now is definitely not the time to panic and make rash decisions. Wait for BFL to prove it has the high hand and then make your moves. Solid approach. Wink

Tired of substandard power distribution in your ASIC setup???   Chris' Custom Cablez will get you sorted out right!  No job too hard so PM me for a quote
Check my products or ask a question here: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=74397.0
westkybitcoins
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 980
Merit: 1004

Firstbits: Compromised. Thanks, Android!


View Profile
July 09, 2012, 03:34:36 AM
 #28

Other.

I don't mine now, but have pre-ordered a single BFL coffee warmer.

Seems to me ASICs, done right, are increasing casual mining, not killing it.

Bitcoin is the ultimate freedom test. It tells you who is giving lip service and who genuinely believes in it.
...
...
In the future, books that summarize the history of money will have a line that says, “and then came bitcoin.” It is the economic singularity. And we are living in it now. - Ryan Dickherber
...
...
ATTENTION BFL MINING NEWBS: Just got your Jalapenos in? Wondering how to get the most value for the least hassle? Give BitMinter a try! It's a smaller pool with a fair & low-fee payment method, lots of statistical feedback, and it's easier than EasyMiner! (Yes, we want your hashing power, but seriously, it IS the easiest pool to use! Sign up in seconds to try it!)
...
...
The idea that deflation causes hoarding (to any problematic degree) is a lie used to justify theft of value from your savings.
420
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 756
Merit: 500



View Profile
July 09, 2012, 04:29:02 AM
 #29

Other

It is an expensive investment to get over 800MH/s which produces about $80 a month for $600 initial investment. That would take 7-8 months to break even if the current return and bitcoin value remain the same but no one knows hence my Other response, not sure if investment is worth it

Investing in solar panels & setup should be worth it because it has more than one use Smiley

Donations: 1JVhKjUKSjBd7fPXQJsBs5P3Yphk38AqPr - TIPS
the hacks, the hacks, secure your bits!
ChiangYay
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 66
Merit: 10


View Profile
July 09, 2012, 07:58:38 AM
 #30

My intentions are to mine my GPU's and BFL FPGA's into the ground until the bitter end (read: not-profitable).  Once/If this point has come, I'll just shut-down entirely until BFL's deadline for the trade-up program approaches. I'll re-evaluate the current mining market at that point and act accordingly.

If I do switch to ASIC: I'll upgrade my two singles but will probably wait for further purchases until there's a competitor on the market.  While BFL's products are arguably the best out there, I have great reservations about supporting them any further.  It's commonly said that the power is with the consumer as one can always vote with their wallet. Outside the upgrade, until they start operating like a proper respectable business, I'll take my money elsewhere.



When will be  BFL's deadline for the trade-up program?
Cablez
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1400
Merit: 1000


I owe my soul to the Bitcoin code...


View Profile
July 09, 2012, 12:43:49 PM
 #31

It was moved to March 1st I believe.

Tired of substandard power distribution in your ASIC setup???   Chris' Custom Cablez will get you sorted out right!  No job too hard so PM me for a quote
Check my products or ask a question here: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=74397.0
Gabi
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1148
Merit: 1008


If you want to walk on water, get out of the boat


View Profile
July 09, 2012, 01:25:28 PM
 #32

Ahahahah, this is bullshit.

While I respect your opinion, I think you're dead wrong.
If BFL will really deliver, then ASIC mining will be much more easy for a casual miner. Just buy a Jalapeno or a Single SC, plug it and it's done, it will mine. Nothing to mess about. Plug and mine.

Now you need to get a decent setup if you want to mine efficiently, so a decent GPU, right drivers and so on

BlackPrapor
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 628
Merit: 504



View Profile WWW
July 09, 2012, 01:52:17 PM
 #33

Ahahahah, this is bullshit.

While I respect your opinion, I think you're dead wrong.
If BFL will really deliver, then ASIC mining will be much more easy for a casual miner. Just buy a Jalapeno or a Single SC, plug it and it's done, it will mine. Nothing to mess about. Plug and mine.

Now you need to get a decent setup if you want to mine efficiently, so a decent GPU, right drivers and so on
Some people just don't get it. The fear of loosing profit blinds I guess...or maybe just trolling others.

There is no place like 127.0.0.1
In blockchain we trust
AzN1337c0d3r (OP)
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 238
Merit: 100

★YoBit.Net★ 350+ Coins Exchange & Dice


View Profile
July 09, 2012, 02:43:31 PM
 #34

There is a surprising amount of people who will continue to mine with GPUs despite the impending large leaps of difficulty due to ASICs.

Shocked

AndrewBUD
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 1078
Merit: 502



View Profile WWW
July 09, 2012, 02:52:41 PM
 #35

So their trade up program starts in 7 months ? I could never get a woody for something so far away...



▄▄▄███████▄▄▄
▄▄█████▀▀''`▀▀█████▄▄
▄███P'            `YY██▄
▄██P'                  `Y██▄
███'                      `███
███'                         ███
▄██'   ▄█████▄▄  ,▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄p   ███
▄██▀  ,████▀P▀███.`██████████P   ▀██▄
███[ ,████ __. ███.   ,▄████▀    ███
███[ ]████████████[  ▄████▀       ███
███[ `████   ,oo2 ▄████▀'       ,███
▀██▄  `████▄▄█████d███████████   ▄██▀
▀██.   `▀▀▀▀▀▀"  Y▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀  ,██▀
███.                        ,███
▀██▄                      ▄██▀
▀███▄_                 ,███▀
▀███▄▄_          _▄▄███▀
▀▀████▄▄ooo▄▄█████▀
▀▀███████▀▀'

365

TM

EZ365 is a digital ecosystem that combines
the best aspects of online gaming, cryptocurrency
trading
and blockchain education. ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀

..WHITEPAPER..    ..INVESTOR PITCH..

.Telegram     Twitter   Facebook

                       .'M████▀▀██  ██
                      W█Ws'V██  ██▄▄███▀▀█
                     i█████m.~M████▀▀██  ███
                     d███████Ws'V██  ██████
                     ****M██████m.~███f~~__mW█
          ██▀▀▀████████=  Y██▀▀██W ,gm███████
      g█████▄▄▄██   █A~`_WW Y█  ██!,████████
   g▀▀▀███   ████▀▀`_m████i!████P W███  ██
 _███▄▄▄██▀▀▀███Af`_m███   █W ███A ]███  ██
__ ~~~▀▀▀▀▄▄▄█*f_m██████   ██i!██!i███████
Y█████▄▄▄▄__. i██▀▀▀██████████ █!,██████
 8█  █▀▀█████.!██   ██████████i! █████
 '█  █  █   █W M█▄▄▄██████   ██ !██
  !███▄▄█   ██i'██████████   ██
   Y███████████.]██████████████
   █   ███████b ███   ██████
   Y   █   █▀▀█i!██   ████
    V███   █  █W Y█████
      ~~▀███▄▄▄█['███
            ~~*██

Play

            │
    │      ███
    │      ███
    │      ███
    │   │  ███
   ███  │  ███
   ███ ███ ███
 │  ███ ███ ███
███ ███ ███ ███
███ ███  │   │
███ ███  │   │
 │   │
 │

Trade

           __▄▄████▄▄
     __▄▄███████████████▄▄▄
 _▄▄█████████▀▀~`,▄████████████▄▄▄
 ~▀▀████▀▀~`,_▄▄███████████████▀▀▀
   d█~  =▀███████████████▀▀
   ]█! m▄▄ '~▀▀▀████▀▀~~ ,_▄▄
  ,W█. *████▄▄__ '  __▄▄█████
  !██P  █████████████████████
   W█. - ██████████████████▀
  i██[   ~ ▀▀█████████▀▀▀
 g███!
Y███

Learn
[/tabl
Cablez
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1400
Merit: 1000


I owe my soul to the Bitcoin code...


View Profile
July 09, 2012, 03:59:35 PM
 #36

No, I believe it ends on March 1st. After that tough noogies. Grin

Tired of substandard power distribution in your ASIC setup???   Chris' Custom Cablez will get you sorted out right!  No job too hard so PM me for a quote
Check my products or ask a question here: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=74397.0
ChanceCoats123
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 682
Merit: 500



View Profile
July 09, 2012, 05:52:34 PM
 #37

I feel like people who post in this thread need to first state their reasoning for mining bitcoins:

Profit vs. "The good of the coin"

If you're in BTC for profitability, then ASIC is the end of the casual miner.

If you're in BTC for the good of the coin, then ASIC is a casual miner's wet dream.
TechCF
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 109
Merit: 10


View Profile
July 10, 2012, 08:53:51 AM
 #38

Depending on the cost to ship back the single that is on its way to me, I might end up mining with GPU,FPGA and ASIC. On some of my computers its like running SETI or Folding, its a drop in the ocean, but costs me nothing and will help the community/economy.

I am sure I will sell some GPUs on my dedicated rig.
GenTarkin
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 2450
Merit: 1002


View Profile
July 10, 2012, 03:03:38 PM
 #39

Im currently a casual gpu miner w/ only 1.7gh or so. While the current unknown future of btc mining is at hand, i think i will just wait to see when asic companies actually deliver, and adopt to asic when they become more mainstream. In the meantime ill run my gpu's aslong as profitable =)

GenTarkin's MOD Kncminer Titan custom firmware! v1.0.4! -- !!NO LONGER AVAILABLE!!
Donations: bitcoin- 1Px71mWNQNKW19xuARqrmnbcem1dXqJ3At || litecoin- LYXrLis3ik6TRn8tdvzAyJ264DRvwYVeEw
OmegaNemesis28
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 280
Merit: 250


View Profile
July 10, 2012, 04:25:52 PM
 #40

I'll be switching my gpu's over to LTC when my 8 jalapenos arrive

Dare I ask why 8 jal?
The price of 8 jal is equiv. to a Single, yet your producing 28 Gh/s as opposed to 40Gh/s. you're paying the same price for less hashing.
Im just curious because Im considering the investment myself.
hakock
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 27
Merit: 0


View Profile WWW
July 10, 2012, 07:38:09 PM
 #41

I'll be switching my gpu's over to LTC when my 8 jalapenos arrive

Dare I ask why 8 jal?
The price of 8 jal is equiv. to a Single, yet your producing 28 Gh/s as opposed to 40Gh/s. you're paying the same price for less hashing.
Im just curious because Im considering the investment myself.
I did it, too, because of two reasons:
1. My actualy BFL Single FPGA (first generation) is pretty loud, the coffe warmer I expect to be more quiet.
2. I plan to invest in a ASIC Mini Rig asap, after that I can spread my jal around to "spread the word" and get my family and friends into bitcoin, too.
Aseras
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 658
Merit: 500


View Profile
July 11, 2012, 03:02:50 PM
 #42

How about "I'll switch to ASIC when it's not speculative vaporware".
Tomatocage
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1554
Merit: 1222

brb keeping up with the Kardashians


View Profile
July 11, 2012, 04:06:22 PM
 #43

I'm going to start GPU mining up again when the 7990 comes out, but I'll be mining Litecoins.

Recommended Exchanges: Binance.com | CelsiusNetwork
GPG ID: 4880D85C | 1% Escrow | 8% IPO/ICO Escrow services Temporarily Closed | Bitcointalk is the ONLY place where I use this name (No Skype/IRC/YIM/AIM/etc) | 13CsmTqGNwvFXb7tD9yFvJcEYCDTB8wQTS | Beware of these SCAM sites! | *Sponsored Link
ModusPwnd
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 546
Merit: 10



View Profile
July 11, 2012, 06:30:10 PM
 #44

Ill probably not be mining in a year.  I have 21 video cards and 1 BFLsingle running right now.  Once my cards no longer turn a profit I will sell all that hardware off.  I will probably do a trade up if it seems like its worth the extra cost, but I'm not too keen on dumping a bunch of money on ASIC.
cdb000
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 112
Merit: 11



View Profile
July 11, 2012, 06:39:11 PM
 #45


 I currently mine with 14 5870, 3 5970s and a 5850.
 Of these, 10 5870s are watercooled and generate hot water as well as Bitcoins.
 I am in the UK, Power costs £0.11 by day and half that overnight.

 Assuming that BFL's hardware really comes into existence in October, it is likely that there will be a period of a few months while they ship the pre-ordered units, during which time the difficulty can be expected to rise fairly rapidly. We are expecting the block reward to drop to 25 in December. Assuming that the value of the Bitcoin fails to double at this time, that may well be the point in time when I reluctantly turn off my miners. I intend to mine right up to the bitter end, undervolting my GPUs to increase efficiency and ultimately mining only overnight when the power is cheaper.
 
 And after that?

 Maybe start another alternative blockchain with a hashing scheme designed to run on GPUs, but different enough that BFL's ASICs can't handle it...

 Of course, the value of Bitcoins might continue to rise, such that GPUs might still make profit.
 Or BFL might go tits up - maybe the top dog there will do a runner with all the cash from pre-orders.
 Or something else.

 Summary: Wait and see.
Gabi
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1148
Merit: 1008


If you want to walk on water, get out of the boat


View Profile
July 11, 2012, 06:53:53 PM
 #46

How about "I'll switch to ASIC when it's not speculative vaporware".
This is probably what i'm going to do

If ASICs are real then it won't be a choice, either you get one or you are better don't mine (so this survey is a bit useless, if you will really be able to get 40GH/s for 1300$ then mining with gpu or fpga will be useless) but paying now for something wich doesn't exist doesn't convince me..

Aseras
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 658
Merit: 500


View Profile
July 12, 2012, 01:28:20 AM
 #47

Yep I feel bad for the ones who paid bfl with bitcoins.

Bfl is probably using the capital to drive up bitcoin value only.. Then they can easily say oops we screwed up here's a refund of your 1300 or the equivalent value of bitcoins at that time.
AzN1337c0d3r (OP)
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 238
Merit: 100

★YoBit.Net★ 350+ Coins Exchange & Dice


View Profile
July 12, 2012, 03:08:24 AM
 #48

so this survey is a bit useless


An interesting question that I hope this poll will answer is what existing non-BFL FPGA miners will do.

Will they sell their device on the secondary market to recoup costs or continue mining because the incremental cost to do so is next-to-nothing?


BlackPrapor
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 628
Merit: 504



View Profile WWW
July 12, 2012, 03:42:51 AM
 #49

so this survey is a bit useless


An interesting question that I hope this poll will answer is what existing non-BFL FPGA miners will do.

Will they sell their device on the secondary market to recoup costs or continue mining because the incremental cost to do so is next-to-nothing?


Cost is indeed next to nothing, but the revenue will also be next to nothing...

There is no place like 127.0.0.1
In blockchain we trust
dropt
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1512
Merit: 1000



View Profile
July 13, 2012, 06:27:48 AM
 #50


Some people just don't get it. The fear of loosing profit blinds I guess...or maybe just trolling others.

Were you referencing my statement, or someone elses? 
Syke
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3878
Merit: 1193


View Profile
July 13, 2012, 07:37:12 AM
 #51

If BFL does ship an ASIC, and the difficulty shoots up too high, I would rather quit mining than give a company like BFL any money.

Buy & Hold
BlackPrapor
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 628
Merit: 504



View Profile WWW
July 13, 2012, 08:58:29 AM
 #52


Some people just don't get it. The fear of loosing profit blinds I guess...or maybe just trolling others.

Were you referencing my statement, or someone elses? 
Well, if you're agreeing that ASICs will kill the 'casual' miner, then yes I refer to your statement. What BFL does, is giving miners ability to purchase high efficiency products with high range in price. They effectively cover prices from $150 to $30k. They sell to anyone. Now tell me, why is the casual miner will be killed? I say, the casual miner's thickheadness conservatism could kill him, nothing more, nothing less...

There is no place like 127.0.0.1
In blockchain we trust
dropt
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1512
Merit: 1000



View Profile
July 13, 2012, 09:51:51 AM
 #53


Some people just don't get it. The fear of loosing profit blinds I guess...or maybe just trolling others.

Were you referencing my statement, or someone elses? 
Well, if you're agreeing that ASICs will kill the 'casual' miner, then yes I refer to your statement. What BFL does, is giving miners ability to purchase high efficiency products with high range in price. They effectively cover prices from $150 to $30k. They sell to anyone. Now tell me, why is the casual miner will be killed? I say, the casual miner's thickheadness conservatism could kill him, nothing more, nothing less...

I suppose I view it like this.  The casual miner could have mined coins back in the day just by owning a computer.  Then, you could mine if you had a decent enough video card.  As soon as that was figured out, it essentially killed the ability for anyone who owns a basic computer to participate unless they had a decent video card.  If you had a computer with a decent video card, just turn it on and away you go.  When you're done, go back to your gaming or what have you.  FPGA's came out but didn't really mess with the ability for those with just a decent video card to participate.  But, now with the ASIC  what's been done is essentially made it so that anyone who wants to participate has to spend money they normally wouldn't have on an application specific device that has absolutely 0 purpose outside of mining... just to participate.

 
Nachtwind
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 700
Merit: 507



View Profile
July 13, 2012, 10:20:12 AM
 #54

I might switch once ASICs exist. But since they dont exist i dont bother thinking about it.
Lethos
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 476
Merit: 250


Keep it Simple. Every Bit Matters.


View Profile WWW
July 13, 2012, 02:50:15 PM
 #55

I'm very much I'll believe it when I see it kinda person. BFL have not proven their latest product, so I have no interest in being pulled in by their marketing out of fear of losing out, on some kind of theoretical edge if and when they do exist. I didn't miss out on any edge when the FPGA's came out, it won't be any different with the ASIC's.
I will however comment on it and watch by the side lines however.

So I will bide my time and wait until someone can actually prove an ASIC is working effectively, efficiently and wants to sell them at a half decent price. Since I just don't think they can pull off all they stated and because of that will wait until their is an ASIC that I do believe will perform like they say.

Creating ASIC is hardly a simple or easy thing, my dad (Semi-retired) did work in the semi-conductor industry and has done his fair share of projects with ASIC and FPGA's, so he let me know about the process of the different ASIC and FPGA many years ago and refreshed my memory just recently when I got into bitcoin. FPGA's are so much easier to work with for a reason, they can be reprogrammed, which is a huge advantage in newer markets. Bitcoin is a new thing, not like their is a bunch of ASIC sitting around that happen to do exactly what we need it to do.

Bitcoins as a new market, could change, security algorithm could be change, entire method could be altered, you just don't know what is around the corner. Also just look at how often with the FPGA's the hardware developers have updated the firmware for them and still are. That won't be an option with an ASIC, if there is a mistake, a bug or low performance your stuck with it.

The design process for creating an ASIC is very intense and long, something I'm not sure BFL is ready for and most definitely underestimating, I also don't think the bitcoin itself is mature enough to know nothing will be changing that won't effect an ASIC hardware 1-2 years from now making them have a short lifespan.

They are actually expensive to create, because of how they are built to specifically for your design, they are generally only viable cheaply individually when you create 100,000's + so I still think they are exaggeration of course on all their numbers, since it's just not viable at a price point let alone comparing the performance numbers. They've had a lot of orders, maybe 500-1000, I know the bigger ones would have multiple chips, but it still doesn't reach the bulk order to warrant such a low price for them.

However their is no doubt ASIC will eventually outperform FPGA's, just like the are starting to with GPU's.
I think it's too early to say ASIC's will be the next big thing and also don't think it be any time soon.
FPGA's and ASIC are common place in many other industries, they aren't always dominant over each other.

opentoe
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1274
Merit: 1000

Personal text my ass....


View Profile WWW
July 13, 2012, 09:05:32 PM
 #56

wheres are the options "i dont have gpu's or fpga's but i plan on buying BFL-asic or non-BFL-asic"?

This is me also. 

Need help with your Newznab usenet indexer? http://www.newznabforums.com
opentoe
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1274
Merit: 1000

Personal text my ass....


View Profile WWW
July 13, 2012, 09:28:43 PM
 #57

Isn't that how all the old boards are configured and tuned, using different firmware? You are saying if someone buys a single they could have a $1300 brick on their hands?

Need help with your Newznab usenet indexer? http://www.newznabforums.com
rjk
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 448
Merit: 250


1ngldh


View Profile
July 14, 2012, 03:47:10 AM
 #58

Isn't that how all the old boards are configured and tuned, using different firmware? You are saying if someone buys a single they could have a $1300 brick on their hands?

What it means is that all the tuning happens at the factory, with the exception of overclocking, if that is an option.

Mining Rig Extraordinaire - the Trenton BPX6806 18-slot PCIe backplane [PICS] Dead project is dead, all hail the coming of the mighty ASIC!
Thralen
Full Member
***
Offline Offline

Activity: 123
Merit: 100


View Profile
July 14, 2012, 06:07:47 AM
 #59

Running with GPUs currently. When an ASIC for bitcoin mining physically exists I will most likely purchase one. I was discouraged from pre-ordering since BFL does not currently offer any sort of payment option that can be refunded if they breach their promises via release date or performance. Bank wire or BTC are the only payment options, neither of which can be recovered without co-operation of the recipient.

Thralen

Supporting bitcoin as best I can with 1. mining, 2. buying with bitcoin, 3. selling (or trying to) for bitcoin. If you make a donation to:  1MahzUUEYJrZ4VbPRm2h5itGZKEguGVZK1  I'll get it into circulation.
BlackPrapor
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 628
Merit: 504



View Profile WWW
July 14, 2012, 08:24:14 PM
 #60


Some people just don't get it. The fear of loosing profit blinds I guess...or maybe just trolling others.

Were you referencing my statement, or someone elses? 
Well, if you're agreeing that ASICs will kill the 'casual' miner, then yes I refer to your statement. What BFL does, is giving miners ability to purchase high efficiency products with high range in price. They effectively cover prices from $150 to $30k. They sell to anyone. Now tell me, why is the casual miner will be killed? I say, the casual miner's thickheadness conservatism could kill him, nothing more, nothing less...

I suppose I view it like this.  The casual miner could have mined coins back in the day just by owning a computer.  Then, you could mine if you had a decent enough video card.  As soon as that was figured out, it essentially killed the ability for anyone who owns a basic computer to participate unless they had a decent video card.  If you had a computer with a decent video card, just turn it on and away you go.  When you're done, go back to your gaming or what have you.  FPGA's came out but didn't really mess with the ability for those with just a decent video card to participate.  But, now with the ASIC  what's been done is essentially made it so that anyone who wants to participate has to spend money they normally wouldn't have on an application specific device that has absolutely 0 purpose outside of mining... just to participate.

 


Well, I could say you have to have a banking license, 'just to participate' in banking business. You need a license for frequency 'just to participate' in communication business. And there are no small licenses for starters, i.e. not affordable for an average person. Bitcoin personal banking system lets you 'mine' at very low cost. Right now you're complaining that in order to dig for gold you have to buy a shovel, since all gold on the surface is gone and you can't just take it with your hands, so to speak. However, unlike shovels for gold digging, ASICs can be eventually integrated into other, more casual items, like cars, public bitcoincard processing hubs, even laptops and cellphones. That's if Bitcoin becomes widely accepted....

There is no place like 127.0.0.1
In blockchain we trust
ldrgn
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 118
Merit: 10


View Profile
July 15, 2012, 06:59:19 AM
 #61

ASICs can be eventually integrated into other, more casual items, like cars, public bitcoincard processing hubs, even laptops and cellphones.

This won't happen because those small mining units will be inefficient (compared to a dedicated mining rig with minimal variable costs) and will likely run at a loss.  You've also got to have storage space for the block chain, a fat enough pipe to handle the bajillion transactions per block in the Bitcoin of the future, cooling and all kinds of stuff that makes mining in anything else than a dedicated setup with low costs unprofitable.
dropt
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1512
Merit: 1000



View Profile
July 15, 2012, 11:17:26 PM
 #62

Well, I could say you have to have a banking license, 'just to participate' in banking business. You need a license for frequency 'just to participate' in communication business. And there are no small licenses for starters, i.e. not affordable for an average person. Bitcoin personal banking system lets you 'mine' at very low cost. Right now you're complaining that in order to dig for gold you have to buy a shovel, since all gold on the surface is gone and you can't just take it with your hands, so to speak. However, unlike shovels for gold digging, ASICs can be eventually integrated into other, more casual items, like cars, public bitcoincard processing hubs, even laptops and cellphones. That's if Bitcoin becomes widely accepted....

I think trying to compare mining bitcoin to two federally regulated industries is a bit of a straw-man argument. With that said I'm not even going to bother talking about those points.  As per your shovel and mining gold analogy:  I view digging with your hands akin to CPU mining and the shovel akin to GPU mining.  You can mine for gold with a shovel, sure. You can also pot plants; dig a grave, ditch, hole; and clean up dog shit.  A shovel is a pretty versatile tool that can be used for many other things than digging for gold.  In fact, a lot of people already own shovels so re-purposing the shovel to dig for gold means anyone who owns a shovel can potentially dig for gold.  I suppose one could say that the FPGA is like a back-ho.  It's much more efficient, however it costs more to purchase and at the end of the day, in most places you need to be a ticketed operator to use one.  I view the ASIC kind of like a specialized industry specific machine:



 It's going to be insanely efficient at serving it's purpose (ignoring cost), and it's not something you have just kicking around the backyard.  It's also got no real use outside of it's intended industry.

All of those points aside, I think there's a massive disconnect between the current ASIC state and having manufacturers designing BTC mining ASIC into everyday appliances.  Do you honestly think you're going to see GM shipping trucks that mine bitcoins while you drive at any point, ever?  
BlackPrapor
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 628
Merit: 504



View Profile WWW
July 16, 2012, 05:10:37 AM
 #63

Well, I could say you have to have a banking license, 'just to participate' in banking business. You need a license for frequency 'just to participate' in communication business. And there are no small licenses for starters, i.e. not affordable for an average person. Bitcoin personal banking system lets you 'mine' at very low cost. Right now you're complaining that in order to dig for gold you have to buy a shovel, since all gold on the surface is gone and you can't just take it with your hands, so to speak. However, unlike shovels for gold digging, ASICs can be eventually integrated into other, more casual items, like cars, public bitcoincard processing hubs, even laptops and cellphones. That's if Bitcoin becomes widely accepted....

I think trying to compare mining bitcoin to two federally regulated industries is a bit of a straw-man argument. With that said I'm not even going to bother talking about those points.  As per your shovel and mining gold analogy:  I view digging with your hands akin to CPU mining and the shovel akin to GPU mining.  You can mine for gold with a shovel, sure. You can also pot plants; dig a grave, ditch, hole; and clean up dog shit.  A shovel is a pretty versatile tool that can be used for many other things than digging for gold.  In fact, a lot of people already own shovels so re-purposing the shovel to dig for gold means anyone who owns a shovel can potentially dig for gold.  I suppose one could say that the FPGA is like a back-ho.  It's much more efficient, however it costs more to purchase and at the end of the day, in most places you need to be a ticketed operator to use one.  I view the ASIC kind of like a specialized industry specific machine:



 It's going to be insanely efficient at serving it's purpose (ignoring cost), and it's not something you have just kicking around the backyard.  It's also got no real use outside of it's intended industry.

All of those points aside, I think there's a massive disconnect between the current ASIC state and having manufacturers designing BTC mining ASIC into everyday appliances.  Do you honestly think you're going to see GM shipping trucks that mine bitcoins while you drive at any point, ever?  

Yes, you've provided a better analogy. But imagine being able to have that huge machinery (or a small one) which does it's work without you having to drive it or do anything? Just plug-n-...work Smiley. That's what I'm trying to get through here. I have no idea if we ever see cars with ASICs on board, just like I had no idea if we will ever see a car with tv, computer, hybrid power and etc... Time will show, sorry for using cliches.

There is no place like 127.0.0.1
In blockchain we trust
Cranky4u
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 810
Merit: 1000



View Profile WWW
July 16, 2012, 06:06:01 AM
 #64

so this survey is a bit useless


An interesting question that I hope this poll will answer is what existing non-BFL FPGA miners will do.

Will they sell their device on the secondary market to recoup costs or continue mining because the incremental cost to do so is next-to-nothing?



If ASICs hit the market, I will be reprogramming my FPGAs to undertake other business work such as LTC mining, cracking lost passwords as a commercial spin off or some other number crunching venture.

This sort of thing is not for the average Joe but then again I am an electrical / electronics engineer whom should be able to pick it up over a few weeks.

johnyj
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1988
Merit: 1012


Beyond Imagination


View Profile
July 17, 2012, 08:11:08 AM
 #65

There are only 7200 coins to be mined every day no matter what kind of mining machine people setup, this is a big difference compared to gold mining

Newer hardware and heavy investment just redistribute a portion of the daily coin to people who have higher hashing power, and unless the BTC value increase exponentially, their return on investment will drop quickly as they invest more, I think this is the most interesting part in BTC


BlackPrapor
Hero Member
*****
Offline Offline

Activity: 628
Merit: 504



View Profile WWW
July 18, 2012, 01:35:15 PM
 #66

There are only 7200 coins to be mined every day no matter what kind of mining machine people setup, this is a big difference compared to gold mining

Newer hardware and heavy investment just redistribute a portion of the daily coin to people who have higher hashing power, and unless the BTC value increase exponentially, their return on investment will drop quickly as they invest more, I think this is the most interesting part in BTC


You're right, ultimately the demand for investment is dictated by exchange rate , and thus the difficulty too.

There is no place like 127.0.0.1
In blockchain we trust
P!nk4sand
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 75
Merit: 10



View Profile
July 18, 2012, 08:16:34 PM
 #67

I own GPUs, and I'm switching to BFL ASIC, i choose this one Grin
ThiagoCMC
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 1204
Merit: 1000

฿itcoin: Currency of Resistance!


View Profile
July 18, 2012, 08:18:56 PM
 #68

I think I'll pre-order a 2~4 Jalapenos soon...
But don't know yet...
I'm still buying some 7970...
zorgberg
Member
**
Offline Offline

Activity: 62
Merit: 10


View Profile
July 20, 2012, 08:02:38 PM
Last edit: July 20, 2012, 08:34:16 PM by zorgberg
 #69

I think the BFL ASIC numbers could be close to accurate...If we look at academic research we can see that 5x speedup over FPGA is feasible on ASIC.  In fact, considering the type of algorithm that mining requires there are several papers documenting similar algorithms achieving a 4-5x speedup on ASIC over FGPA.

Now crunch a little numbers...

BFL puts two 2 FGPA  in BF single, so that's ~415 Mhash/s per FPGA.  Assume they can achieve the maximum speedup, 5x, over their FGPA = 2.075 Ghash/s per chip.  

One chip won't reach the 3.5 GHash/s reported for Jalapeno, so it means Jalapeno must have 2 ASICS (and also that they are probably not achieved the 5x speedup), at $149 per Jalapeno thats ~$75 per chip.

Single SC is at 40Gh/s that's ~19 (lets just say 20 because probably not exactly 5x speedup) chips that's $1299/20 = $61.00 per chip

Mini rig at 1Th/s is ~500 (!) chips.  At $30000 that's $60.00 per chip


Now the question is if they can raise enough funds to cover the total production cost (~12 mill for $26.00 per chip using the estimation I found) and deliver by October.

This is of course just back of the envelope calculations, but it does show that their numbers are feasible..

BitCoiner2012
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 364
Merit: 250



View Profile
August 16, 2012, 09:17:56 PM
 #70

Well, I could say you have to have a banking license, 'just to participate' in banking business. You need a license for frequency 'just to participate' in communication business. And there are no small licenses for starters, i.e. not affordable for an average person. Bitcoin personal banking system lets you 'mine' at very low cost. Right now you're complaining that in order to dig for gold you have to buy a shovel, since all gold on the surface is gone and you can't just take it with your hands, so to speak. However, unlike shovels for gold digging, ASICs can be eventually integrated into other, more casual items, like cars, public bitcoincard processing hubs, even laptops and cellphones. That's if Bitcoin becomes widely accepted....

I think trying to compare mining bitcoin to two federally regulated industries is a bit of a straw-man argument. With that said I'm not even going to bother talking about those points.  As per your shovel and mining gold analogy:  I view digging with your hands akin to CPU mining and the shovel akin to GPU mining.  You can mine for gold with a shovel, sure. You can also pot plants; dig a grave, ditch, hole; and clean up dog shit.  A shovel is a pretty versatile tool that can be used for many other things than digging for gold.  In fact, a lot of people already own shovels so re-purposing the shovel to dig for gold means anyone who owns a shovel can potentially dig for gold.  I suppose one could say that the FPGA is like a back-ho.  It's much more efficient, however it costs more to purchase and at the end of the day, in most places you need to be a ticketed operator to use one.  I view the ASIC kind of like a specialized industry specific machine:



 It's going to be insanely efficient at serving it's purpose (ignoring cost), and it's not something you have just kicking around the backyard.  It's also got no real use outside of it's intended industry.


Good thinking, love this analogy.  I am still very skeptical of ASIC though.. we will see. I don't know much about mining, though. Just what I learn inexorably.

BTC Long.
sharp666
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 8
Merit: 0


View Profile
August 28, 2012, 03:24:12 PM
 #71

i really wonder how many gpu miners will be switching to LTC when asic comes out.  a couple posts mentioned it, but LTC could really take off if all the current (minus fpga) hashing power went over to LTC.  perhaps another poll is in order.
YokoToriyama
Newbie
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 58
Merit: 0



View Profile
August 29, 2012, 12:01:02 AM
 #72

I think there's a lot of angle's here but this is the evolution of bitcoins.
ACIS were not made specifically for bit coins
they existed before., bitcoin is not a get rich quick scheme
so even if the profit so low for GPU when ASIC drops
it depends on the person if they want to upgrade.

Also one big thing butterfly labs is an american company
and this product at 1333.00 and 30g's we aren't talking cheap
they are helt over a standard and at 6000+ order i don't
think they plan on disappointing they have come through
with there mini rig's in the past., so the logical thing if
your going to keep mining is to go in with ASIC 
Pages: 1 2 3 4 [All]
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!