Author

Topic: What is 'G' when it comes to difficulty of shares? (Read 828 times)

legendary
Activity: 952
Merit: 1000
1.1G is 1.1 billion. Or written another way:

1,100,000,000

Like a "gigashare" or something?  Would a trillion difficulty share be T for tera, and a quadrillion difficulty share be P for peta?
It's exactly that but it's called Gigahash.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_large_numbers#Extensions_of_the_standard_dictionary_numbers

The Giga-prefix is 109, which is 1 Billion.
legendary
Activity: 1834
Merit: 1020
1.1G is 1.1 billion. Or written another way:

1,100,000,000

Like a "gigashare" or something?  Would a trillion difficulty share be T for tera, and a quadrillion difficulty share be P for peta?
It's exactly that but it's called Gigahash.

I thought a gigahash is a certain number of hash calculations, e.g. 1 gigahash/s is 1,000,000,000 hashes calculated per second.  Therefore, I think I'm just talking about one hash calculation that satisfied both the difficulties for an acceptable share value (in this particular case, d=128) and for solving a block (d=68.2M).

That's why I called it a gigashare, and I put it in quotes because I wasn't sure what else to call it.
full member
Activity: 235
Merit: 100
1.1G is 1.1 billion. Or written another way:

1,100,000,000

Like a "gigashare" or something?  Would a trillion difficulty share be T for tera, and a quadrillion difficulty share be P for peta?
It's exactly that but it's called Gigahash.
legendary
Activity: 1834
Merit: 1020
1.1G is 1.1 billion. Or written another way:

1,100,000,000

Like a "gigashare" or something?  Would a trillion difficulty share be T for tera, and a quadrillion difficulty share be P for peta?
vip
Activity: 1358
Merit: 1000
AKA: gigavps
1.1G is 1.1 billion. Or written another way:

1,100,000,000
hero member
Activity: 792
Merit: 1000
Bite me
how would you represent 1000M ?
legendary
Activity: 1834
Merit: 1020
I was mining some litecoins and found a share at difficulty "2.22G"

What the hell is G?  If 2.22M is 2.22 million, then G is...?
Jump to: