Author

Topic: Mining with Slow Miners - Difficulty ? (Read 1071 times)

legendary
Activity: 2982
Merit: 4193
June 29, 2014, 05:43:53 AM
#15
well i have a question too someone says to me if the miners stop mining for a day or so then the difficulty goes down.. so we have to cut out the suplly of the world for one week or so .. to make the difficulty down.. or he is just joking .? or he dont know what is difficulty..?
Not true, if you stop everyone to mine for 1 day, difficulty wouldn't go down since we are looking at 2 weeks and ASICs are constantly being shipped. If you are talking about cutting it for 1 weeks, it wouldn't have too much impact.
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
June 29, 2014, 04:52:10 AM
#14
well i have a question too someone says to me if the miners stop mining for a day or so then the difficulty goes down.. so we have to cut out the suplly of the world for one week or so .. to make the difficulty down.. or he is just joking .? or he dont know what is difficulty..?
hero member
Activity: 868
Merit: 1000
June 24, 2014, 10:38:20 AM
#13
AFAIK dogecoin does not have any p2pool nodes, although I may be wrong about this.

I believe you could use p2pool for almost all altcoins. http://p2pool.org/
full member
Activity: 130
Merit: 100
June 24, 2014, 09:54:25 AM
#12
I think Slow miners are not much profitable.
full member
Activity: 211
Merit: 100
June 22, 2014, 11:30:18 PM
#11
You can still mine some of the new coin designed for cpu mining only.

legendary
Activity: 2982
Merit: 4193
June 22, 2014, 11:09:55 PM
#10
CPU mining have a lower chance of getting a share as your CPU is very slow, the dogecoin difficulty is very high. Even if you set the difficulty to 8, you may have difficulty getting a share. Your cpu will also die very soon as the heat is very high. You would also be wasting your time and electricity trying to mine a few dogecoins.
sr. member
Activity: 644
Merit: 260
June 22, 2014, 04:41:55 PM
#9
AFAIK dogecoin does not have any p2pool nodes, although I may be wrong about this.

It would be likely that your computer would simply be eating up your electric bill (increasing it) while not producing any meaningful revenue. You would also have the issue of the wear and tear it would put on your CPU
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 251
June 22, 2014, 11:55:50 AM
#8
The computer is not running for the sake of mining coins, but for other tasks mainly.
And I am considering pooled mining, of course.
full member
Activity: 122
Merit: 100
June 22, 2014, 11:47:41 AM
#7
Now mining become less profitable than past. If you are using slow miners than i must say that you are wasting your time and electricity bill. You should mine with pools. It is a better option for you.
hero member
Activity: 784
Merit: 500
June 22, 2014, 08:36:33 AM
#6
No, in all cases I use different worker IDs. Some pools might react badly (even the same pool after software changes), and it doesn't provide benefit.
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 251
June 22, 2014, 08:12:23 AM
#5
Thanks rarkenin!

[...]For example, while I stay away from buying power or mining sha coins on ghash.io, their LTC pool allows me to run a bunch of small miners with 6kh/sec to 40kh/sec. [...]

In this case, do you connect all the small miners using the same worker ID in order them to achieve the "combined speed", or when you say total of e.g. 40kH/s, it is simply the sum of all workers and the chance for submitting a share increases?
hero member
Activity: 784
Merit: 500
June 22, 2014, 07:25:17 AM
#4
Yes, you will eventually be able to get a payout. For example, while I stay away from buying power or mining sha coins on ghash.io, their LTC pool allows me to run a bunch of small miners with 6kh/sec to 40kh/sec. At default diff, they will eventually get shares, although I decrease the smaller miners' diff to 4 or 8 (the issue being in that they need to find one diff-16 share to show up in the worker list and have their diff. edited, although this isn't a problem for even the smallest miners).

Mining to p2pool directly is definitely going to be harder based on the diff., although I personally do not know if p2pool public nodes accept weaker shares and mine for a sharechain "block".
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 251
June 22, 2014, 06:15:12 AM
#3
The question is more like a concept than actually earning doges/btc etc.

Can I get to a point with my slow, 10kH/s miners where I get a payout or pools simply reject such slow miners / low difficulty shares?
sr. member
Activity: 274
Merit: 250
June 22, 2014, 06:09:22 AM
#2
I'm not sure even Dogecoin is worth mining with such little power. I think you'd be better or trying to earn doges another way. People give them away quite a lot.
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 251
June 22, 2014, 04:24:05 AM
#1
Hey!

I have a few slow computers that I would like to use to mine e.g. Dogecoin in their idle time. By slow I mean in the order of 10kH/s. (I am not trying to make a full time income here)

I can set the difficulty of my miner to produce shares more frequently so they get accepted. By using the normal difficulty of e.g. p2pool I don't even submit shares at all.

My question is the following:

What happens if I submit shares at a much lower difficulty than the actual pool difficulty? Will the pool simply reject all of these? Or eventually 100000 of my reported shares will count as 1 share in the pool?

Can I use p2pool and set my miner to a lower difficulty? Or alternatively, could you suggest another pool?

Thanks!
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