Author

Topic: Why is no one developing PCIe ASIC miners? (Read 923 times)

legendary
Activity: 883
Merit: 1005
July 12, 2013, 03:07:14 PM
#8
Its about coming out with solutions for each Price point.
legendary
Activity: 883
Merit: 1005
This is copy past from user kendog77 in that other thread

"In theory, it should be easier to put Avalon chips on a PCI-E based card than it is to come up with a complete, standalone mining solution."


I would add its also cheaper for the smaller Bitcoin miner. Clearly there is a gap. And this Gap is growing. You have the $30K units and you have the $100 units. And not a whole hell of a lot between.
hero member
Activity: 490
Merit: 501
Is there an advantage over USB? Surely bandwidth is not a problem?

probably not, but you pack a lot of punch on a PCI board and computers already have fans. in essence, it is just another option. not everyone likes having lots of cables and devices laying around and would prefer to hide it all in their computer case.
sr. member
Activity: 771
Merit: 258
Trident Protocol | Simple «buy-hold-earn» system!
Just for info, af ew more comments about this topic on this thread:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/is-anyone-working-on-a-pci-e-based-asic-hashing-module-226450
hero member
Activity: 560
Merit: 500
Is there an advantage over USB? Surely bandwidth is not a problem?
legendary
Activity: 883
Merit: 1005
Agreed. Yes anything that can be connected to a mother board and powered off my PSU. It's fact that GPU mining is dead. We should try to take advantage of the old hardware.
Edit: I think there would be lots of demand for some thing in the $500 to $800 range that could replace all those GPUs.
hero member
Activity: 490
Merit: 501
I want a PCIe ASIC miner. Some thing in the $400 to $800 range.



 

I'd prefer PCI more slots.
legendary
Activity: 883
Merit: 1005
I want a PCIe ASIC miner. Some thing in the $400 to $800 range.



 
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