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Topic: Difficulty after BFL (Read 5223 times)

newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
May 03, 2013, 10:33:52 AM
#49
3/4 months... or 5...
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
May 03, 2013, 10:33:23 AM
#48
definitely will go up very quickly, but not immediately, but soon you will be disseminated on a large scale, from 3 months to think about ...
member
Activity: 103
Merit: 10
May 03, 2013, 03:03:20 AM
#47

How exactly could it crash the exchange rate?

Altcoins are already crashing exchange rate ie through market share.
member
Activity: 103
Merit: 10
May 03, 2013, 03:01:05 AM
#46
It would be approximately an increase of 0 hashes/second because BFL will never ship.

 Grin

Eat humble waffle!!!
newbie
Activity: 24
Merit: 0
May 03, 2013, 02:22:06 AM
#45

Personally I don't agree. I think BFL should intentionally flood the market with hundreds of units a day for some period of time, at least long enough to catch up on pre-orders. Sure it might crash the exchange rate, but most miners aren't going to be profit taking immediately after they get their rigs up and running... they'll do what they always do, quietly accumulate bitcoins, selling off barely enough to offset power costs and wait for a nice bubble to sell into. After the last speculative bubble I'm not too worried about the price dropping to single digits, there's enough support to keep it 'high enough' and avalon has already increased the hash-rate to the point that we'd probably only see one quick difficulty adjustment instead of the the 3 that were originally projected. and extra 3600 hundred coins for a couple days... not much at all really.


How exactly could it crash the exchange rate?  There are only 3600 coins generated per day (not 3600 hundred which would be 3,600,000.)  25 every 10 minutes.  That's not a constant I know but an average based on the difficulty - which is only adjusted every 2016 blocks.  NOT every 2 weeks.  So if the hash rate were to DOUBLE in one day due to a huge influx of new BFL boxes.. all those blocks would be found much faster.. theoretically twice as fast.. but still there wouldn't be any EXTRA coins out there.  The difficulty would just raise after about a week instead of 2 weeks.

How would that crash the exchange?


If anything.. the exchange rate baseline should raise with the difficulty.  Because new coins generated now require more work and more power.  If the value of coins doesn't raise considerably after the insurgence of BFL boxes, it would no longer be profitable to mine.  When miners can't break even because the difficulty is so high that a $2500 50GHs miner doesn't produce enough coinage - they'll stop mining.  Why power a rig that isn't producing enough coins to pay the electric bill.  Why purchase a $2500 miner if there's no way to recoup the cost of the miner?

So therefore the coins that those miners do produce they will not sell for less than enough to pay for their troubles.  This changes the supply and demand ratio.  As new people become interested in BTC, want to use it for commerce, want to buy it and invest in it, the more BTC we need in circulation to support that demand.  So that would theoretically drive up the price - or cause the need to move a decimal point.  Maybe we no longer care how much 1 BTC trades for but what .01 BTC trades for.  But the raise in demand for new BTC in circulation is supposed to be supplied by miners.  So the value has to go up with the difficulty.  Not necessarily a 1:1 relationship, but there is a practical relationship between the two.
newbie
Activity: 37
Merit: 0
May 02, 2013, 03:58:13 PM
#44
My totally unmotivated guess therefore is 100 times today's difficulty at the end of the year.

Today it is
Quote
20:52 ;;diff
20:52 1.0076292883418716E7
and thus we will have 1E9 at the end of 2013.
member
Activity: 81
Merit: 10
May 02, 2013, 02:41:35 PM
#43
My guess is 400 mill by years end.
hero member
Activity: 1036
Merit: 500
May 02, 2013, 02:36:12 PM
#42
legendary
Activity: 3248
Merit: 1070
May 02, 2013, 11:22:46 AM
#41
"Difficulty after BFL"

skyrocket
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
April 29, 2013, 09:11:20 AM
#40
True.

What I meant was, that if they wanted to have this awesome business model, that might be a viable option. Avalon did it right, limiting their orders to a batch of units and then Boom closing the window.

Since they had the floodgates open, I hope they start their "locus" strategy at some time Wink
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
April 28, 2013, 09:09:58 PM
#39
Quote
Yeah I think you're right.  Although if they went bankrupt now they wouldn't finish the boxes, and there'd be nothing to go to KS to buy

I think they'd buy a plane ticket to punch them Cheesy

Quote
I suspect it's not that they can't easily disclose it, but that they don't want to.  I'm just praying that there are a lot of cancellations and not 40,000 units about to be shipped.  Also that it takes them a little while to ship.  That they don't actually produce 400 units a day.  Here's why: the slower the total hashrate rises, the better for those of us who purchased.  The early adopters will get more time to recoup with their boxes.  If they ship in order anyway, the hash rate will be the same when I get my box (barring what is added from other sources) whether they ship slowly or quickly.  But if they ship slowly, and that speed stays slow after my box is shipped, the total hash rate won't rise as fast AFTER I get my box and I too will have more time to recoup.


The problem is, they shouldn't even sell that many units. If they pull it off well, there is no TH flood and people will be happy. Happy enough to buy the next 1TH/s miner. Then the 10TH/s miner, once that one is out of order.

There is a limited supply of money coming their way. If they are all smart, they keep making products, but keep the hashrates introduced into the market adding up SLOWLY rather than quickly. That way, the miners will make their money back, everyone is happy.

Market flooding is hard. The 1/3 shipping plan for example is an idiotic idea. Maybe fair to the first buyers, but it will lead to an almost immediate hashrate spike, leading to an immediate hit on the market. This is a singular, disruptive event for the market that is completely idiotic.

If they honour this, take a look at the market prices for days. Volatility is going to spike to some new heights. And then it cools down around a new market price. I am not going to make any predictions where this is though. Only that volatility is gonna skyrocket.

Personally I don't agree. I think BFL should intentionally flood the market with hundreds of units a day for some period of time, at least long enough to catch up on pre-orders. Sure it might crash the exchange rate, but most miners aren't going to be profit taking immediately after they get their rigs up and running... they'll do what they always do, quietly accumulate bitcoins, selling off barely enough to offset power costs and wait for a nice bubble to sell into. After the last speculative bubble I'm not too worried about the price dropping to single digits, there's enough support to keep it 'high enough' and avalon has already increased the hash-rate to the point that we'd probably only see one quick difficulty adjustment instead of the the 3 that were originally projected. and extra 3600 hundred coins for a couple days... not much at all really.


sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
April 28, 2013, 09:02:59 PM
#38
It's not that they CAN'T disclose anything about their shipments, it's that they DON'T WANT TO. The lack of transparency that BFL has when it comes to their policies and their business it is downright shameful. I think everyone should come together and threaten a class action lawsuit if they don't release bank statements, produce a bill for their purchase of ASIC chips, give more info shipping, etc. I would bet every dollar I have that they had nothing set up when they started business and then financed development and production with pre-order money. This is illegal, as any company selling something that does not exist must be regulated as a security.

IF YOU SEE THIS, JOSH ZERLAN, YOU'RE A FUCKING SCUMBAG LIAR WHO HAS SUCCESSFULLY CONNED THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE BY LYING TO THEM ABOUT WHEN PRODUCTS WILL SHIP. THE ONLY WAY YOU WILL BE ABLE TO REGAIN FAITH IS BY TELLING YOUR CUSTOMERS THE TRUTH. OPEN UP YOUR RECORDS

God bless this troll in particular. Had a lovely laugh reading that.

Listen, no company owes it's customers such transparency. What could you possibly sue them for "failing to produce a cutting edge product in the time we thought it should be finished" ? Secondly, selling pre-orders on a product that doesn't exist isn't in any way illegal, games aren't "regulated as a security" and people pre-purchase them all the time. In addition to that nobody lied to you, it was well understood that said product didn't exist and would be developed when the pre-orders were sold. In addition to that, you've always had the option of getting a refund if you requested one (although legally you agreed at time of purchase that BFL wasn't obligated to provide a refund). Also, the simple fact that they've refunded folks who've asked should indicate that they didn't infact use the pre-order money for development of the product... and now that they're shipping it's proven to not be 'a scam'.

So while i'm cranky at the delay of the singles and rigs... and that avalon shipped first... I can't blame BFL for being what they are... what we all knew they were from their business practices in the fpga market... a well intending start-up that lacked real world experience in product development, assembly and delivery.

Hopefully they'll get the process ironed out start shipping a couple thousand units a week... then you can find something else to whine about instead of this.

member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
April 28, 2013, 04:53:31 PM
#37
It's not that they CAN'T disclose anything about their shipments, it's that they DON'T WANT TO. The lack of transparency that BFL has when it comes to their policies and their business it is downright shameful. I think everyone should come together and threaten a class action lawsuit if they don't release bank statements, produce a bill for their purchase of ASIC chips, give more info shipping, etc. I would bet every dollar I have that they had nothing set up when they started business and then financed development and production with pre-order money. This is illegal, as any company selling something that does not exist must be regulated as a security.

IF YOU SEE THIS, JOSH ZERLAN, YOU'RE A FUCKING SCUMBAG LIAR WHO HAS SUCCESSFULLY CONNED THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE BY LYING TO THEM ABOUT WHEN PRODUCTS WILL SHIP. THE ONLY WAY YOU WILL BE ABLE TO REGAIN FAITH IS BY TELLING YOUR CUSTOMERS THE TRUTH. OPEN UP YOUR RECORDS
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
April 26, 2013, 09:56:30 PM
#36
I did a small projection of FPGA farm mining with the rise in difficulty level. Not entirely accurate but it's based off of projections and current USD/BTC, etc.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=178051.20
I did not find one spot where you mentioned anything about difficulty.

The difficulty rise is in the charts. I estimated a large purchase of FPGAs based off of an old estimation of the rise of difficulty, showing that the rise in difficulty level will make a ~48GH/s almost unprofitable.
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
April 26, 2013, 09:07:58 AM
#35
Quote
Yeah I think you're right.  Although if they went bankrupt now they wouldn't finish the boxes, and there'd be nothing to go to KS to buy

I think they'd buy a plane ticket to punch them Cheesy

Quote
I suspect it's not that they can't easily disclose it, but that they don't want to.  I'm just praying that there are a lot of cancellations and not 40,000 units about to be shipped.  Also that it takes them a little while to ship.  That they don't actually produce 400 units a day.  Here's why: the slower the total hashrate rises, the better for those of us who purchased.  The early adopters will get more time to recoup with their boxes.  If they ship in order anyway, the hash rate will be the same when I get my box (barring what is added from other sources) whether they ship slowly or quickly.  But if they ship slowly, and that speed stays slow after my box is shipped, the total hash rate won't rise as fast AFTER I get my box and I too will have more time to recoup.


The problem is, they shouldn't even sell that many units. If they pull it off well, there is no TH flood and people will be happy. Happy enough to buy the next 1TH/s miner. Then the 10TH/s miner, once that one is out of order.

There is a limited supply of money coming their way. If they are all smart, they keep making products, but keep the hashrates introduced into the market adding up SLOWLY rather than quickly. That way, the miners will make their money back, everyone is happy.

Market flooding is hard. The 1/3 shipping plan for example is an idiotic idea. Maybe fair to the first buyers, but it will lead to an almost immediate hashrate spike, leading to an immediate hit on the market. This is a singular, disruptive event for the market that is completely idiotic.

If they honour this, take a look at the market prices for days. Volatility is going to spike to some new heights. And then it cools down around a new market price. I am not going to make any predictions where this is though. Only that volatility is gonna skyrocket.
newbie
Activity: 24
Merit: 0
April 26, 2013, 03:23:16 AM
#34
Quote
I don't get why they can't "easily" disclose this.  This information is critical to knowing what the mining capability of these boxes are.

Preventing breakdown, perhaps?

Let us assume that hundreds of people have hit them with refunds. And they are now operating in a risky area, where they stay liquid by new preorders and venture money, praying that people won't go crazy asking for refunds, because that would put them in a credit crunch.

The exact credit crunch they need, since they want to pay DHL and UPS.

SO if he does something stupid now, they might go bankrupt, be unable to finish the boxes and several thousand people who are happily mining enough money for a ticket to Kansas will buy one. Happy days Wink

Yeah I think you're right.  Although if they went bankrupt now they wouldn't finish the boxes, and there'd be nothing to go to KS to buy.

I suspect it's not that they can't easily disclose it, but that they don't want to.  I'm just praying that there are a lot of cancellations and not 40,000 units about to be shipped.  Also that it takes them a little while to ship.  That they don't actually produce 400 units a day.  Here's why: the slower the total hashrate rises, the better for those of us who purchased.  The early adopters will get more time to recoup with their boxes.  If they ship in order anyway, the hash rate will be the same when I get my box (barring what is added from other sources) whether they ship slowly or quickly.  But if they ship slowly, and that speed stays slow after my box is shipped, the total hash rate won't rise as fast AFTER I get my box and I too will have more time to recoup.

Not to mention that when these DO ship there will be MORE new orders as people jump on the band wagon thinking that it's a get rich quick scheme.  So I'd rather people stay skeptical for a while.  Smiley
full member
Activity: 224
Merit: 100
April 25, 2013, 04:11:20 AM
#33
Quote
I don't get why they can't "easily" disclose this.  This information is critical to knowing what the mining capability of these boxes are.

Preventing breakdown, perhaps?

Let us assume that hundreds of people have hit them with refunds. And they are now operating in a risky area, where they stay liquid by new preorders and venture money, praying that people won't go crazy asking for refunds, because that would put them in a credit crunch.

The exact credit crunch they need, since they want to pay DHL and UPS.

SO if he does something stupid now, they might go bankrupt, be unable to finish the boxes and several thousand people who are happily mining enough money for a ticket to Kansas will buy one. Happy days Wink
hero member
Activity: 1162
Merit: 500
April 25, 2013, 02:00:31 AM
#32
Two Jalapenos a day won't have that much influence on difficulty Grin


member
Activity: 94
Merit: 10
April 24, 2013, 11:10:42 PM
#31
I did a small projection of FPGA farm mining with the rise in difficulty level. Not entirely accurate but it's based off of projections and current USD/BTC, etc.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=178051.20
I did not find one spot where you mentioned anything about difficulty.
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
April 23, 2013, 01:08:27 AM
#30
I did a small projection of FPGA farm mining with the rise in difficulty level. Not entirely accurate but it's based off of projections and current USD/BTC, etc.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=178051.20
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