I am thinking about switching back to NH app for various reason(one of them being it's hashing a bit lower than NH based on what you are saying x16r). So my questions is there is dollar amount in the active wallet section, how does one get that into their wallet? Edit: For gpu mining that is, as CPU mining I am getting better hashrate than NH(mostly because there is way more algos to choose from).
Few other comments and things I've noticed. At least in my testing for cpu mining auto switching isn't picking the most profitable to mine and sometimes choose something that is half the profitability of another coin. I get that I can just stick to one thing, but that becomes harder when not at home monitoring the rig(like at work). So, it be nice if switching did choose the best coins for those time you can't be hands on. Wait, right now mining blake2s or zergpool and it's telling me I could make $2+ dollars, and it's increasing, but 0 out of 0 results accepted so far(past 5 minutes). Is this correct or is there also an issue here with the pool or software? I am really hoping no issue as 2+ out of a cpu would be great. Also, windows is showing me that cpu is only 60% at most being used with your app while cpu mining, but NH and xmrig was at 95% cpu usage. Is that normal?
More things to note the app crashed on me 3 times tonight. Twice trying bitcore on cpu(clicked start then app froze and crashed) and once on keccak. Okay so mining neoscrypt via cpu also had the app crash on me.
Thank you for trying my software out and all your feedback, sorry it didn't work out they way we both would have hoped.
I didn't think that NiceHash currently supports x16r, so I'm not sure how you are comparing hash rates for that algorithm and that is the only GPU algorithm that currently has an issue with benchmarking. But NiceHash has its own miner, Excavator, that may be faster than Tpruvot for certain algorithms. Unfortunately, I haven't had the opportunity to add support for Excavator to my software yet. Also, Excavator has some pretty stringent licensing which makes it difficult to distribute legally.
Each pool has its own minimum payout limits and you'll have to look at each pool's website for the details. Once your unpaid balance at the pool reaches that minimum amount, the pool will automatically deposit your current balance into your wallet. Unfortunately, most pools will not payout amounts less than their minimum payouts. If you would like to switch back to NiceHash but still get your unpaid pool balances, you should just mine on the ones with the highest unpaid balances with another mining program until you are paid out - just be sure to use the same wallet address as you used in Hash Auger.
Chances are you cannot make $2 mining any algorithm on your CPU, so I would say that is an issue. However, it is not an issue I can reproduce on my machine right now because the estimated profits for Blake2s on Zergpool for either of my video cards is $.62 and $0.00 for my i7. You might want to double check the benchmarked hash rates for your CPU to see if the rate is something other than kHs or if the number seems unrealistic. My i7-6700k is benchmarked around 16000 kHs for blake2s. Not having any accepted shares after only five minutes is completely normal if you are trying to mine an algorithm with a high difficulty on a low-powered device like a CPU.
Hash Auger will temporarily stop mining with an algorithm that keeps failing on a device. That may be why you are seeing the software skip the most profitable algorithms. If you want to PM me with some screen captures or your log files, I'd be more than happy to take a closer look.
As for the CPU utilization, if you have a CPU with hyperthreading, some CPU miners don't use the processor's virtual cores because they are not as efficient as its physical cores. Also, not using the virtual cores allows TurboBoost to work more effectively. However, Windows Task Manager always uses the total of the physical and virtual cores. So the CPU miner might be using 4 physical cores but Task Manager shows 8 total cores (4 physical + 4 virtual) instead, which means it will display your CPU usage as being only around 50% (or a little more with TurboBoost on) even though your processor is fully utilizing its fastest cores.
Unfortunately the CPU miners are not very stable as I keep mentioning, which is why I disable CPU mining by default. I have spent a bit of time looking for the most stable versions of the CPU mining software that I can find, but at the end of the day, the miners are someone else's code that I have no control of and can only do so much to program around. However, when the miners fail, the software usually recovers and attempts to mine something else unless the miner failure has thrown the entire system into an unstable state .These stability issues are most likely why NiceHash doesn't support nearly as many CPU algorithms. Since profitability for CPU-minable coins does not change as much as that of GPU coins, you may want to consider just setting up a few batch files to mine your favorite CPU coins using JayDDee or CPUMiner while using Nicehash or something else to profit-switch your GPUs.