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Topic: freshly mowed grass (Read 2857 times)

hero member
Activity: 633
Merit: 500
August 01, 2014, 09:47:40 AM
#52
Any kind of mining using a computer is not what I would say wise. Your computer more than likely would not handle it before it burnt out and you may not even manage to mine anything. Purchasing coins instead of mining and keeping them safe for a period of time for the price to increase could be a wiser option for you Smiley

Sadly, this is pretty much the case now.

In the past, GPU mining litecoin/dogecoin (when there is no scrypt ASIC) and CPU mining primecoin was quite profitable, but the good times are gone now.
sr. member
Activity: 406
Merit: 250
August 01, 2014, 07:36:04 AM
#51
Any kind of mining using a computer is not what I would say wise. Your computer more than likely would not handle it before it burnt out and you may not even manage to mine anything. Purchasing coins instead of mining and keeping them safe for a period of time for the price to increase could be a wiser option for you Smiley
legendary
Activity: 3038
Merit: 4418
Crypto Swap Exchange
August 01, 2014, 04:20:11 AM
#50
You could mine some alt coins.
Please research about the computer, the GPU does not have opencl support. Furthermore, it should be very very old so the performance should be degraded too. The CPU is far to slow to think about CPU mining in alt coins.
hero member
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000
August 01, 2014, 04:14:37 AM
#49

A bit of a description below:

2.7 GHz Dual Core AMD Athalon 5200+ Processor (comparable to Intel Core 2 Duo) - 4 GB DDR2 Ram - 140GB Hard Drive - DVD-RW Drive (Pioneer brand) - ATI Radeon 9800 Pro graphics card with dual VGA cable (dual display capable) - Asus Case with 2 front USB 2.0 ports - ASROCK GLAN motherboard Note: running Linux Mint, a modern, elegant, open source, and intuitive operating system

So, is this computer ok for mining coins?


I am afraid not.
Your CPU is already 8 years old (launched in 2006) while you GPU is over 10 years old (launched in 2003)...
hero member
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000
August 01, 2014, 04:09:02 AM
#48

A bit of a description below:

2.7 GHz Dual Core AMD Athalon 5200+ Processor (comparable to Intel Core 2 Duo) - 4 GB DDR2 Ram - 140GB Hard Drive - DVD-RW Drive (Pioneer brand) - ATI Radeon 9800 Pro graphics card with dual VGA cable (dual display capable) - Asus Case with 2 front USB 2.0 ports - ASROCK GLAN motherboard Note: running Linux Mint, a modern, elegant, open source, and intuitive operating system


So, is this computer ok for mining coins?

If you're mining altcoins, especially newer altcoins you could stand a chance at playing the market.

If you're wanting to mine Bitcoins, you will need some serious ASIC equipment.  An AntMiner S3 is the current, though, you can get started with an AntMiner S1 for relatively cheap nowadays that the S3 has been released and that would get you started.  With that also, the S1 is capable of WiFi, but if you have some capital to spend pick up a few S3's and instantly get into the TH/s.

Do research if go altcoins.  Some are great some are a waste of your precious mining power.  Granted you hit one right you could get huge profits, but a lot of alt coins really are pump and dump.  But there luckily some alt coin's that are more stable.

But yes if you get right altcoin you could make a lot, just watch out for crappy coins.

True that most of the altcoins are created for pump and dumps, but you could also gain from the pumps.
You may mine altcons that are very new, and sell them when they get listed in an altcoin exchange, and switch to a newer altcoin. Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1456
Merit: 1000
July 31, 2014, 06:05:36 PM
#47

A bit of a description below:

2.7 GHz Dual Core AMD Athalon 5200+ Processor (comparable to Intel Core 2 Duo) - 4 GB DDR2 Ram - 140GB Hard Drive - DVD-RW Drive (Pioneer brand) - ATI Radeon 9800 Pro graphics card with dual VGA cable (dual display capable) - Asus Case with 2 front USB 2.0 ports - ASROCK GLAN motherboard Note: running Linux Mint, a modern, elegant, open source, and intuitive operating system


So, is this computer ok for mining coins?

If you're mining altcoins, especially newer altcoins you could stand a chance at playing the market.

If you're wanting to mine Bitcoins, you will need some serious ASIC equipment.  An AntMiner S3 is the current, though, you can get started with an AntMiner S1 for relatively cheap nowadays that the S3 has been released and that would get you started.  With that also, the S1 is capable of WiFi, but if you have some capital to spend pick up a few S3's and instantly get into the TH/s.

Do research if go altcoins.  Some are great some are a waste of your precious mining power.  Granted you hit one right you could get huge profits, but a lot of alt coins really are pump and dump.  But there luckily some alt coin's that are more stable.

But yes if you get right altcoin you could make a lot, just watch out for crappy coins.
sr. member
Activity: 392
Merit: 250
★ BitClave pre-ICO: 25/07/17 ★
July 31, 2014, 04:46:06 PM
#46

A bit of a description below:

2.7 GHz Dual Core AMD Athalon 5200+ Processor (comparable to Intel Core 2 Duo) - 4 GB DDR2 Ram - 140GB Hard Drive - DVD-RW Drive (Pioneer brand) - ATI Radeon 9800 Pro graphics card with dual VGA cable (dual display capable) - Asus Case with 2 front USB 2.0 ports - ASROCK GLAN motherboard Note: running Linux Mint, a modern, elegant, open source, and intuitive operating system


So, is this computer ok for mining coins?

If you're mining altcoins, especially newer altcoins you could stand a chance at playing the market.

If you're wanting to mine Bitcoins, you will need some serious ASIC equipment.  An AntMiner S3 is the current, though, you can get started with an AntMiner S1 for relatively cheap nowadays that the S3 has been released and that would get you started.  With that also, the S1 is capable of WiFi, but if you have some capital to spend pick up a few S3's and instantly get into the TH/s.
legendary
Activity: 3038
Merit: 4418
Crypto Swap Exchange
July 31, 2014, 05:58:31 AM
#45
Nobody told me I need a server to mine, just have one sitting there and my first ASIC rigs on the way is what I mentioned.  Specifically the r-box newest gen... This is a question of operating a server as a host for other miners/investing, I guess, as well as running my own ASIC rigs, also about making your own pools but need server and such....  I am new, like I have mentioned but always learning:).  I appreciate any input/advise and thank you. Grin
You would need to code your front and backend. You would also need popularity to make people to mine at your pool, people usually prefer 0% fees pool, unless you can have 100% uptime and beautiful interface and better features than gnash.io, people wouldn't want to leave that pool. Coding requires effort so does support and anti ddos server cost.
legendary
Activity: 3038
Merit: 4418
Crypto Swap Exchange
July 31, 2014, 05:56:07 AM
#44
So I am new to bitcoin/mining.  Waiting for my first as ASIC miner to come in mail.  Not sure if this right topic or spot to ask, but have been researching and found that having your own dedicated server is best if you where to mine?... Understanding equipment cost +/- $k, but in this case I am currently living with my fiancé and parents who had a call center business not work out Undecided and currently own a Dell PowerEdge 2900 with 48g ram 6T SATA just sitting there for past year and a half  Shocked(also cage and racks in storage all server room equip.).  I guess question is (we have fam member that know how to setup and what not), is this the better route to go? or other means (pools or personal)?...I appreciate any feedback. Thank you.
Hopefully you would get your ASIC, some of those either scams or delay preorders. Dedicated server is literally CPU mining, with at most 1-100MH/s it can barely even gain BTC. You can set up your own if you have a lot of hashrates, maybe 1-10PH to block within decent intervals so that you would not experience lower profits. For pooled mining, your work will be shared among others which means you are only paid for what share you submitted and not if you have strike lucky and solved a block.
DrG
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 1035
July 31, 2014, 12:35:58 AM
#43
Nobody told me I need a server to mine, just have one sitting there and my first ASIC rigs on the way is what I mentioned.  Specifically the r-box newest gen... This is a question of operating a server as a host for other miners/investing, I guess, as well as running my own ASIC rigs, also about making your own pools but need server and such....  I am new, like I have mentioned but always learning:).  I appreciate any input/advise and thank you. Grin

Well you could use your server to host a pool but that would require quite a bit of low latency bandwidth, tons of time (I mean tons if you want the pool to succeed), and the electricity to support a powerful miner.

If you're willing to donate bandwidth and electricity you could always run a Bitcoin node - which simply means leaving Bitcoin-QT running so you can relay the blockchain to other people - that would help support the network.
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
July 30, 2014, 11:50:06 PM
#42
Nobody told me I need a server to mine, just have one sitting there and my first ASIC rigs on the way is what I mentioned.  Specifically the r-box newest gen... This is a question of operating a server as a host for other miners/investing, I guess, as well as running my own ASIC rigs, also about making your own pools but need server and such....  I am new, like I have mentioned but always learning:).  I appreciate any input/advise and thank you. Grin
DrG
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 1035
July 30, 2014, 11:26:14 PM
#41
So I am new to bitcoin/mining.  Waiting for my first as ASIC miner to come in mail.  Not sure if this right topic or spot to ask, but have been researching and found that having your own dedicated server is best if you where to mine?... Understanding equipment cost +/- $k, but in this case I am currently living with my fiancé and parents who had a call center business not work out Undecided and currently own a Dell PowerEdge 2900 with 48g ram 6T SATA just sitting there for past year and a half  Shocked(also cage and racks in storage all server room equip.).  I guess question is (we have fam member that know how to setup and what not), is this the better route to go? or other means (pools or personal)?...I appreciate any feedback. Thank you.

I'm not sure who told you that you need a server to mine.  With current ASIC mining technology you not even need a single computer to mine as some ASICs like Bitmain's S3 connect directly to the pool with an ethernet cable.  Other miners require some basic control either through a raspberry pi or a basic PC but you don't need a server level machine.
newbie
Activity: 2
Merit: 0
July 30, 2014, 10:56:07 PM
#40
So I am new to bitcoin/mining.  Waiting for my first as ASIC miner to come in mail.  Not sure if this right topic or spot to ask, but have been researching and found that having your own dedicated server is best if you where to mine?... Understanding equipment cost +/- $k, but in this case I am currently living with my fiancé and parents who had a call center business not work out Undecided and currently own a Dell PowerEdge 2900 with 48g ram 6T SATA just sitting there for past year and a half  Shocked(also cage and racks in storage all server room equip.).  I guess question is (we have fam member that know how to setup and what not), is this the better route to go? or other means (pools or personal)?...I appreciate any feedback. Thank you.
member
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
July 30, 2014, 10:40:39 PM
#39
Do not mine on GPU, better buy BTC now as its cheap or get some ASIC 
sr. member
Activity: 266
Merit: 250
July 30, 2014, 09:25:01 PM
#38
As someone else mentioned, I'd kinda forget about mining. CPU/GPU mining is dead and the only way to mine is by either buying an ASIC or cloudmining (which again, I wouldn't really recommend).
hero member
Activity: 700
Merit: 500
July 30, 2014, 09:23:47 PM
#37
Unless your computer looks like this...



I would forget about mining. As pictured above, bitcoin mines are now reaching industrial scale.

That's a nice looking mining farm, does it cool with liquid can't tell much from those pictures
Still sexy

Oh thanks Tammy Chan (Kawaii namae)

His company, MegaBigPower, has invested over $1 million into two warehouses that feature hundreds of mining rigs running side by side on dozens of racks that stand seven feet high. It consumes 1.4 megawatts of power - enough to run a small town. It currently relies on huge fans circulating outside air to cool the rigs. During a recent visit, it was 30 degrees outside and 102 inside.

"I don't even know how many rigs we are running; we are expanding all the time," says Carlson. Each mining rig is valued between $5,000 and $6,000 and relies on the Bit Fury processor that has been custom-engineered to run the algorithm Bitcoin requires.

"The business plan was designed at $50 Bitcoin," says Carlson. With Bitcoin now trading near $650, that's quite a profit if it's converted into dollars.
hero member
Activity: 820
Merit: 1000
July 30, 2014, 03:51:37 PM
#36
Unless your computer looks like this...



I would forget about mining. As pictured above, bitcoin mines are now reaching industrial scale.

Where is that picture coming from? Which mining farm does it show and what's their hash rate? Looks mezmerizing Cheesy
It is from a news which covered bitcoin. They actually went inside the mining datacenter. It is owned by megabigpower.com. They are located at north America and their hashrate should be about 6 PH.

That's pretty impressive! They could be best of by utilizing immersion cooling for their operation! But if they are located in Nothern America, I wonder if they're in Washington State. There are places where electricity is practically free. In that case they wouldn't even need to cut their costs by using immersion cooling!

You can find the news article (together with a video) on that the following page.
http://www.komonews.com/news/local/Bitcoin-Modern-day-gold-rush-or-risky-investment-249577361.html
DrG
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 1035
July 30, 2014, 03:47:48 PM
#35
Try googling friedcat or AsicMiner and see how big their farm is.  They're sitting on 150PH/s worth of chips and trying to find buyers or they're just going to make miners themselves.
hero member
Activity: 820
Merit: 1000
July 30, 2014, 03:45:33 PM
#34


Just curious, did you read some very out-dated tutorial in bitcoin mining?

I wonder why all those sites haven't been updated in such a long time. There are still tutorials about GPU-mining and FPGAs are the latest craze! Also, BFL and Mt. Gox mentions everywhere.

someone googles it, they want the traffic..

You are right.
I just tried googling "buying bitcoin" and I am really surprised to see a site in page 1 still putting mtgox on the "top places" lol...
hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 500
Trust me!
July 30, 2014, 02:16:22 PM
#33
Thanks for sharing picture.  I had not seen inside of the bitfurry one before.

Is this a bitfury mining farm? I thought this was a farm run by megabigpower.com... Are they maybe running bitfury equipment?
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