First you say....
We've always been using ASICs. A CPU is an ASIC, a GPU is and an FPGA is. The reason the great leap (much more than 10x) with regards to cost per hash takes place is because instead of us buying pre-manufactures ASICs (CPUs, GPUs, FPGAs) from someone else, we'll be making them ourselves. That's like the difference between buying apples in a store and planting your own tree in your garden, the costs are several order of magnitudes less in the latter case.
Then you say....
With that being said, it's obvious that the efficiency figure will become increasingly unimportant as we reach these levels. No one is going to be spending a fraction of their investment on power with custom SHA256 ASICs, practically all the cost will be from the hardware.
Or to re-iterate..
your point one: ASIC hardware is going to be dirt cheap.
your point two: ASIC hardware is going to be the majority of ROI when compared to electricity...
Does anyone except me see the disconnect here?
Sure, in the short term immediately after the introduction of ASICs, the cost of hardware will drown out the cost of electricity (ASIC hardware is NOT dirt cheap at this point)..
However, as more and more ASIC units come online, the difficulty will sky-rocket. As even more ASICs come up for sale, the ASIC manufacturers will need to start dropping the price or their market will dry up (assuming most miners can do simple ROI calculations). The manufacturers will need to keep droping prices as difficulty incresses.. This will continue till we get to the point where hardware really IS dirt cheap. At this point difficulty will be so astronomically high, ROI will no longer be so much dependant on hardware but once again, will be majorly based upon the cost of electricity.
Historically (during the golden age of GPU's) the pain point has been around 20 cents per KWh. If you pay more than that, it is generally a losing proposition to buy GPU's for the sole purpose of mining.
I predict that a year after ASICs go into full bore production, the pain point will be around 20 cents per KWh. If you pay more than that, it will be generally a losing proposition to buy ASICs for the sole purpose of mining. Since bitcoin ASICs will be Application Specific, this applies even more to ASICs than GPU's.
Sigg
You make a good point. I guess, as you say, it depends on what impact custom ASICs will have on the difficulty. As far as I can see, if we replace all current mining devices with devices that are 10x as efficient
and the difficulty increases by a factor of 10, then there would be no difference -
at all. Except BFL will have made a fortune
.
I guess that's why a ROI of a year or less is preferable with these devices. Some might say that one year is too little to expect, but with a market that moves this fast it might not be. Ie., as I said, if difficulty increases by 10 times during the first year of operation with custom ASICs, then power efficiency-wise - kWh spent per $ in mining income - the miner will be in the exact same situation as before, only with added hardware costs.
I can understand why BFL is entering this market and not mining themselves. They must have made these calculations. I imagine not all the people on the BFL ASIC waiting list have.