Author

Topic: An Interview with Yifu Guo, Creator of Avalon miner (Read 1787 times)

legendary
Activity: 1610
Merit: 1000
Crackpot Idealist
you can say that again. those kinds of things really fan the flames of the BFL witchhunt (which I endorse)

end of the day though, just wish I had one. kudos to someone at least getting the units out into the wild.
member
Activity: 113
Merit: 10
https://www.chynge.net/
Im still surprised how fast he got his ASIC to market.   Totally smoked BFL!
sr. member
Activity: 329
Merit: 250
Bitcoin may be the TCP/IP of money.
assuming it turns out BFL is a scam, so Avalon successfully make itself a monopoly  Cheesy
hero member
Activity: 1484
Merit: 500
Across The Universe
Perhaps
sr. member
Activity: 490
Merit: 251
It is interesting that Avalon is selling ASICs at a lost for $1500 each. So how does BFL make a profit? Run with your money maybe?
newbie
Activity: 56
Merit: 0
http://www.bitcoinrumors.com/2013/03/27/engineering-the-bitcoin-gold-rush-an-interview-with-yifu-guo-creator-of-the-first-asic-based-miner/

From an ASIC perspective, things got serious in around June or July when Butterfly Labs first released their ASIC lineup, which was a big deal. They promised to ship in October, and in a matter of days took in over a million dollars, That, on the one hand, wass exciting because bitcoin is progressing technologically, but on the other hand, we were aware of the potential risks. We can’t have a monopoly in mining. It's not very good for decentralization.
So this is when we decided we had to step up and this is when developing an ASIC suddenly became a real discussion. In September 2012, we announced that we would offer 300 units if we could get the crowdfunding to do it. We announced this fully knowing that our competitor would deliver the next month, but that was fine since we simply wanted to get the chips and the technology out there in the wild.
We never intended for this to be a real business. But then lo and behold, Butterfly Labs announced that they were delayed. October came and went, November came and went, December came and went and they still hadn’t shipped. Meanwhile, we’re chugging along.
Then in late January we tried to deliver. Well, we tried. It was almost Chinese New Year and nothing happens during Chinese New Year. Fast forward to now, we’re done shipping the first few hundred units, so we’re 90 percent done with batch one.

Jump to: