Cryptocurrencies

What cryptocurrencies do you use/own?

  • Bitcoin (XBT)

    Votes: 30 27.8%
  • Ether (ETH)

    Votes: 16 14.8%
  • Litecoin (LTC)

    Votes: 15 13.9%
  • Peercoin (PPC)

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Dash (DASH)

    Votes: 3 2.8%
  • Dogecoin (XDG)

    Votes: 4 3.7%
  • Blackcoin (BLK)

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Zcash (ZEC)

    Votes: 3 2.8%
  • Other

    Votes: 14 13.0%
  • None

    Votes: 69 63.9%

  • Total voters
    108
And without risers, you could build a rig that's more compact and possibly more stable.
Yeah, I could do without risers. Caused me significant grief and several extra hours assembling my rig last night. Ironically VoskCoin put out a new video while I was building last night where he uses a board like that with no risers.

 
Speaking of which, I need to find some metal racking for my Antminers, something like the racking you have (in your last photo). What is that racking called?
Edit: S'ok, I think I found some ...
In case you're still looking...

http://www.estoconnectors.com

edit: I just realized you were talking about the chrome shelves. They're pretty common. Got some from Sam's Club and from Costco. About $80 each. Very sturdy. They have casters so it's easy to roll around and lock in place too.
 
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Thanks. Yeah, I meant the metal/wire shelving. Wasn't sure if that type of shelving/racking had a commonly used name. I was looking for a specific size to fit in a space in my cellar so it would've been easier to find if it had a name. I just searched Ebay for 'wire shelving' and managed to find some about the right size.
 

It's really just a price correction, and completely expected, at least to anyone who's been following cryptocurrencies for a long time it is. In fact I stated here (about a week ago) that I was expecting a major price correction before we pass through $20K. It happens every time Bitcoin's price rises too sharply. In other words, whenever the price gets ahead of the adoption and usage rate (ie the very thing that gives it value), a price correction becomes inevitable. Of course the mainstream media prefer to 'play it up', giving it a dramatic and sensational spin.

If you look at the Bitcoin price chart, scaled to display the last year of price data, there's always a clear exponential curve, which seems to be closely related to the general adoption rate. I've drawn a curve on the chart below to demonstrate what I mean, but it's easy to imagine a 'best fit' curved line even without drawing it.

It becomes clear when you see the exponential growth curve that the recent price rise was speculative and occurred far too rapidly to be sustainable. When the price rises so sharply, there inevitably comes a tipping point when the majority of people start selling (either because of panic or for profit). The higher above the imaginary curve the price rises, the more unsteady the price becomes, requiring only a minor trigger-event to flip the trajectory from bullish to bearish. That trigger-event could be negative news or simply a number of large sell-orders that cause an avalanche of panic sales.

Those who have been trading Bitcoin for some time will see any price below the curve as a chance to grab a bargain and, those who sold high for profit, will be keen to buy back before the price rises again. What this means is that you'll see strong 'support' when the price hits the curve, resisting any further fall in price.

Extending the line into the future, you can see that $20K came about 1-2 months early and that the correction has put the price back on the right trajectory. If I had to take a guess, it would be that the price will 'bounce off' $20K a couple more times and eventually pass through it by around the end of January to mid February. I could be completely wrong of course, but that's my guess judging from past experience ...

BTC.png
 
The money is not in mining it is services South Korea has so many mini bitcoin exchanges and BTM it is a common sight also in North America it is a new growing business with lots of opportunity.
 
What the hell?

https://www.nicehash.com/help/when-and-how-do-you-get-paid

  • Once per week for external wallet unpaid balances, greater than 0.01 BTC.**
** Currently on hold due to extremely high Bitcoin transaction fees. We are already actively working on implementing alternative crypto-currencies for payments.


My son and I both use Nicehash on our gaming computers with GTX 1060 cards. Right now they're earning about $2 USD per day. Mining to an external BTC wallet address. So we'd have to mine 75 days to get any payout. Not a big deal. BUT, currently on hold while working on alternative cryptocurrencies???

All they have for each of us is our BTC address. So if we mine from 7 weeks in this fashion how are we going to get paid if they switch to an alternative currency?
 
BUT, currently on hold while working on alternative cryptocurrencies???
I think they mean it's on hold at present just while the fees are very high (and presumably will resume if congestion eases and the fees reduce). And I think they're saying that separately (as a long-term solution) they're looking to introduce other payment options too:
https://twitter.com/NiceHashMining/status/944481957651668992
Please, note that 0.01 payments are currently on hold due to extremely high Bitcoin transaction fees. This is only temporary and will be back. We are also already actively working on implementing alternative crypto-currencies for payments.

The transaction backlog (Mempool) is pretty high right now, probably due to the recent bursts of activity and price volatility:
https://jochen-hoenicke.de/queue/#30d
Things might calm down for a while now that the price seems to be settling a little, so we may see fees start to reduce for a while.
 
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i doubt things will clam down around here people are starting to find out about bitcoin and now people are asking me for cold storage and hardware ledgers and wallets.
I have noticed more negitive news about bitcoin the more people want to know about it if banks are doing this it seems to be back firing lol i have lineups at my BTM now.

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Right now they're earning about $2 USD per day.
Is that profit, after costs ? Is it really worth doing it for that amount ? You're talking $60 per month per unit. Anything we do in this business can bring that kind of money in about 1 hour. Running a heat pump that makes a ton of noise and gobbles electricity and runs the risk of just dying on you doesnt seem like a good deal when its making just $60 a month.
 
Is that profit, after costs ? Is it really worth doing it for that amount ? You're talking $60 per month per unit. Anything we do in this business can bring that kind of money in about 1 hour. Running a heat pump that makes a ton of noise and gobbles electricity and runs the risk of just dying on you doesnt seem like a good deal when its making just $60 a month.
These aren't mining rigs. It's our desktop PCs. I have two mining rigs with 4x GTX 1080 Ti cards. They make more than $60 per month :D

Our desktop PCs however we run Nicehash for the hell of it. If you're 13 and can run a program on your PC and make $60 a month for doing nothing that's pretty cool. Power cost for each is about $7.20, so I guess the profit margin is really $52.80.
 
Is that profit, after costs ? Is it really worth doing it for that amount ? You're talking $60 per month per unit. Anything we do in this business can bring that kind of money in about 1 hour. Running a heat pump that makes a ton of noise and gobbles electricity and runs the risk of just dying on you doesnt seem like a good deal when its making just $60 a month.

LOL that is not much i am making over 400 a day from fees off my BTM.
 
i am making over 400 a day from fees off my BTM.

Not surprised, and I think if I had a retail shop I'd think hard about putting something like that in (depending on the up-front investment required). It's kind of like the Gold Rush - how do you get rich with much less risk in a rush? Sell mining equipment and supplies.

I'm not going to get into it myself - particularly considering that there appear to be a relative ton of locations in the Chicagoland area - but https://coinatmradar.com/ appears to have quite a bit of information including a very substantial entry on getting into it including legal registrations, capital required (including operating capital), etc. that would at least be a viable starting point to look at.
 
Just saw RX580s for sale for $299 apiece, in stock. I put 12 in my cart and the site didn't complain. I'm focused on Nvidia and high powered cards, but this is tempting.
 
Not surprised, and I think if I had a retail shop I'd think hard about putting something like that in (depending on the up-front investment required). It's kind of like the Gold Rush - how do you get rich with much less risk in a rush? Sell mining equipment and supplies.

I'm not going to get into it myself - particularly considering that there appear to be a relative ton of locations in the Chicagoland area - but https://coinatmradar.com/ appears to have quite a bit of information including a very substantial entry on getting into it including legal registrations, capital required (including operating capital), etc. that would at least be a viable starting point to look at.

All it cost me is electricity of an average Aio pc i got in touch with the btm company signed a contract only responsible for supplying power not the machine so if someone punches and breaks the screen i am not liable.
I have people driving all the way from Quebec to use the machine .

bitaccess_bitcoin_atm_90bfd9d137.jpg
 
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https://ca.finance.yahoo.com/news/ten-years-nobody-come-blockchain-153000922.html
As we talk of fees and network, there is an interesting article from the Yahoo network.
It's worth a read. What I take from the article is that the blockchain needs to evolve more....we of course are early adopters.

This article is a piece of crap! It seems to have been created for an ulterior motive. The author is intentionally dense on most of the issues, speaking of things that have come to pass, or what he/she claims "people" are doing (no sources). In reality much of the info is incorrect, incoherent or purposefully drug through the mud.

The article was written Dec 26th and the video at the top with Jamie Dimon is a misleading one. 3 days after the video (Oct) Jamie Dimon announced that his investment company, JPMorgan Chase announced the launch of a blockchain-based system of their own! So much for the second sentence of the article!
And yet, after years of tireless effort and billions of dollars invested, nobody has actually come up with a use for the blockchain — besides currency speculation and illegal transactions.

So, yeah, Jamie Dimon was already late to the party and his predictions over the years have been obviously wrong up to this point.... as is the author of this article. Visa and others are trying to create their own blockchain tech and patent it. See, this is an attempted power grab to TAKE/STEAL an existing technology that is threatening, so as to control and profit from the use of said tech and to maintain a power dynamic in the banking industry.

The government-backed banking system provides FDIC guarantees, reversibility of ACH, identity verification, audit standards and an investigation system when things go wrong. Bitcoin, by design, has none of these things.

Much of which, the blockchain eliminates by design. The physical identities need not be known. The "auditing" of the system is done by function of the blockchain. In theory, the blockchain doesn't need an investigation system for if things don't go right, the transaction will fail.

As for the FDIC, well, who gives a flying turd! That's for insuring against bank failures. This is what the blockchain eliminates! It's decentralized.

It's worth noting two particular payment use cases where people are particularly excited about blockchain-based currencies: micropayments and bank-to-bank transfers. In terms of micropayments, people enthuse that bitcoin transactions are free and instant. Actually, they take about eight minutes to clear and cost about 4 cents to process.

Really. First, no one thought it was free... ever. That would be stupid and the whole idea of blockchain is that miners are paid with transaction fees, for processing transactions. Very fundamental stuff here. Secondly, "people" are not talking about microtransactions with bitcoin. A ludicrous statement.

Why haven't banks preferred this new technology? The answer is that setting up a Ripple Gateway isn't actually much different than using the existing corresponding-account system

Is that an answer? Or, rather, is the answer "Banks don't make any money off of transfers or by being the gatekeepers, therefore, banks do not see the incentive to adopt such things."
I think that is the answer. Why would a bank be falling all over itself to adopt the technology that eliminates them? To say that blockchain tech is almost the same as SWIFT is ludicrous.

except that a lost password or security token can lead to much larger and more instant actual losses — which, as a reminder, has happened to more leading bitcoin exchanges than have managed to avoid it.
First, you're relying on single-point encryption — your own private keys — rather than a more sophisticated system that might involve two-factor authorization, intrusion detection, volume limits, firewalls, remote IP tracking and the ability to disconnect the system in an emergency.

Never keep your money on an exchange as a storage method, everyone knows this. As for exchange security, most of the problems have been from lax security and/or problems with the exchange operations itself. In the recent NiceHash hack, they were keeping ALL of their Bitcoin in a single HOT wallet - a big NO NO for anybody... first, don't store wealth in a hot wallet. Second, split funds up into multiple wallets, preferably, one per customer.
As for security, a cold wallet on physical paper is hard to crack for a hacker. Trezor, Leger Nano or any other hardware wallet is going to give you better-than-bank security. No mention of that.

"Ten years in, nobody has come up with a use for blockchain"

Well, there you have it.. author Kai Stinchcombe has addressed us, and the 600B market cap on crypto must be part of the "no use found" scenario. Yeah, right! What's this guy smoking?
 
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