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Topic: Using mining gear for other financial purposes? (Read 6113 times)

sr. member
Activity: 381
Merit: 255
I just dont think anyone realizes how much power the Bitcoin economy has. If people really knew, we would be a processing gold mine by now. I think a fine project would be a portal portraying the resources and maybe even private pledges by miners that would like to offer resources.

Reaching out to "whomever" could be interested is the hardest part though.
hero member
Activity: 602
Merit: 500
Your *what* is itchy?
Easynews offers a way to earn bonus gigs of download by donating unused CPU hashing for medical research or something....World Community Grid.  There is interest in using GPU, but currently they have no project using GPU grid computing. and Easynews gives you 1GB of extra download per 7 days of CPU donated....fug that.
hero member
Activity: 492
Merit: 503
Guys, I don't mean to sound like I am a shill for CoinLab, but did anyone actually read posts #21 and #23? I've joined them recently and it sounds like exactly what this thread is asking about. Admittedly all they've got is promises at the moment... but then, so do all the purported ASIC manufacturers who have caused us to ponder questions like this in the first place!
full member
Activity: 179
Merit: 100
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sr. member
Activity: 381
Merit: 255
BUMP!

With ASIC coming online we need alternatives more than ever. Otherwise we are going back to idle mode for thousands of GPU's/FPGA's. Anyone has ANY idea on how data mining can be archived beside BTC ?
hero member
Activity: 616
Merit: 500
I'm using my Bitcoin hardware for the same thing I used it for before I even knew Bitcoin existed - gaming.  Still waiting for the day that Skyrim becomes a "financial purpose," though.

Renting it out to buddies for $2/hour or whatever is the closest you'll get
sr. member
Activity: 504
Merit: 250
hero member
Activity: 616
Merit: 526
Rendering is one thing I can use it for in my studio. If it is really going to help rendering, then I should start planning immediately.
sr. member
Activity: 381
Merit: 255
What we need is a pool that handles the "problems" for the people with hardware. A pool that caters to other types of processing needs than just Bitcoin.
newbie
Activity: 15
Merit: 0
I'm using my Bitcoin hardware for the same thing I used it for before I even knew Bitcoin existed - gaming.  Still waiting for the day that Skyrim becomes a "financial purpose," though.
sr. member
Activity: 411
Merit: 250
You could use Charity Engine - http://www.charityengine.com/ - uses your CPU but there's probably a way to make it use your GPU. Every share of work gets you an entry into their drawing. Previously they've been $10,000 pots but the last one was a $2,000 rig of some sort.
sr. member
Activity: 369
Merit: 250
il ponint miners at something different. i have 1700 mhash and a BFL single if thats any help xP
sr. member
Activity: 381
Merit: 255
Bump!

Nobody interested in working out something ?
sr. member
Activity: 381
Merit: 255
Another member on this forum posted this link: http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9230272/Kaspersky_pleads_for_crypto_help_to_probe_Gauss_malware

I wanted to repost it here, due to the fact that (despite they say brute-force wont help), our community is a bit more than the usual "brute force".

If Kaspersky Labs only wanted to give a prize out for this and enable us to log onto a pool we could hash, job would be done in.....10 min?

At least we could show some muscles.

Original post: https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/kaspersky-needs-help-decrypting-an-encryption-mechanism-in-gauss-100697
newbie
Activity: 29
Merit: 0
On top of my head I can imagine rendering services could use processing power. Was it not Pixar that bought a farm of servers to render their Ice Age movies? And something like it took months to render each hour if I am not mistaken.

I bet that hardware did not earn itself in, but was a justified cost in order to launch the movie.

Now if they only had a farm they could rent to render their stuff........ Wink


Hmm thats an idea....
Titanic did the same thing... a ton of linux machines clustered together to render the CGI (was that redundant?)
http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/2494

So perhaps a distributed graphics rendering engine for rent?
sr. member
Activity: 381
Merit: 255
On top of my head I can imagine rendering services could use processing power. Was it not Pixar that bought a farm of servers to render their Ice Age movies? And something like it took months to render each hour if I am not mistaken.

I bet that hardware did not earn itself in, but was a justified cost in order to launch the movie.

Now if they only had a farm they could rent to render their stuff........ Wink
sr. member
Activity: 270
Merit: 250
1CoinLabF5Avpp5kor41ngn7prTFMMHFVc
Well what I asking for was an alternative "outside" of this industry. The worse thing is to keep working within the same industry, if that industry for some reason is about to fail or simply provides too little funds to make a good living out of it. Lets call it saturation for the sake of the argument.

Now I am not saying Bitcoin is gonna blow anytime soon, if ever. But what I am saying is that there will be a lot of GPU's sitting there doing nothing because they are too expensive to run compared to the myriad of FPGA cards coming out now, and one day ASIC.

So what should all that processing power do? Go to waste and never be used?

What I lack to find is someone that would actually pay for it.

JackH, that is exactly what Coinlab hopes to bring on with this new pool, the ability for GPU miners to continue profitably earning bitcoins in the future by using their GPUs for scientific compute jobs outside of the Bitcoin network. 

We are confident we will be able to find work for our pool that will pay more than bitcoin mining will in an ASIC dominated mining environment, which is why we are willing to provide a profit guarantee to those who join our pool.

In short we agree that GPUs should not "go to waste", and we are willing to provide a payment guarantee and take on the risk of trying to find someone who can use it!
sr. member
Activity: 381
Merit: 255
Well what I asking for was an alternative "outside" of this industry. The worse thing is to keep working within the same industry, if that industry for some reason is about to fail or simply provides too little funds to make a good living out of it. Lets call it saturation for the sake of the argument.

Now I am not saying Bitcoin is gonna blow anytime soon, if ever. But what I am saying is that there will be a lot of GPU's sitting there doing nothing because they are too expensive to run compared to the myriad of FPGA cards coming out now, and one day ASIC.

So what should all that processing power do? Go to waste and never be used?

I remember I once stumbled upon articles stating how the Japan had denied Iran and North Korea access to PS2 boxes, as those could be utilized for their great processing power: http://www.abc.net.au/pm/stories/s119754.htm
However I am not sure our current technology would apply to this scenario and a PS3 or any other computer chip for that matter can handle all the processing need of warfare now at days?

So from this I extrapolate that there must be a need for processing power, even many years later than the PS2 ban. Not that I am all in for processing for Iran or North Korea here, but if one needs it, more must also need it.

What I lack to find is someone that would actually pay for it. That or we are simply to far ahead of the rest of the world thinking in terms like we do in the Bitcoin industry.
sr. member
Activity: 270
Merit: 250
1CoinLabF5Avpp5kor41ngn7prTFMMHFVc

Anyone has any suggestions for where someone can utilize high performance computing?

CoinLab's Pool! We don't have HPC jobs online yet, but expect they will be available through our pool within the next couple months. Check out our announcement thread.

https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/ann-coinlab-protected-pool-99643
full member
Activity: 172
Merit: 100
scrypt need fast access to memory, its not posible to do through usb ... needed direct access...
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