philipma1957
Golden Member
- Jan 8, 2012
- 1,714
- 0
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I dumped a good chunk of coins @ ~$4 last year. Shoulda hung on to them for sure.
that has to hurt.
I dumped a good chunk of coins @ ~$4 last year. Shoulda hung on to them for sure.
Probably canadianbitcoins.com, although their rates are terrible. Depending on where you are, you might want to try localbitcoins.
Transfer from mtgox to dwolla to bank is much cheaper. See if that's available in Canada.
I don't get this whole bitcoining thing. My friend wanted to put all are computers together so we could 'mine.'
from my understanding it takes like a week just to get a coin unless you have a super good gpu.
so 1 coin right now is $18.
so now take into consideration your computer running 24/7 just to get 1 coin. your power bill is going to make you go negative.
So I think I may have lost 10 BTC. The pool I mine with has a BTC payout button and they recently revamped their site so the button is now a one-click payout (used to be a two-step process). Well I hit the button thinking I'd have another step in the process so I could check the address it was being sent to. Turns out it got sent to an old address I used in the past to receive coins.
From what little I understand about bitcoin wallets, the .dat file is stored on your local computer and has a private key associated with it. If that wallet.dat file is lost, then any bitcoins associated with the address are also lost.
So what happens to bitcoins that are sent to an address that is no longer used?
Zero impact. You want to downclock the memory and reduce the voltage, if possible. This is only to save energy and maybe reduce heat a little.I know having a lot of cpu and gpu power is good for bitmining, but what about ram? Does having more ram change any factors in bitmining at all?
The coins will just sit there, you'll just never be able to access them. Each public key has a corresponding private key which is stored in the wallet file, and without that private key you can't access the coins.
Do you have a backup of the wallet.dat file you lost, even if it's a little older? You might be able recover them if that's the case. The wallet in the standard client isn't deterministic so you can't recreate all future receive addresses from an old backup, but it does create and save the next 100 new addresses you'd create, so as long as you don't make a huge number of transactions an old wallet should be ok.
Without doing any research I'm asking here. How do ARM/APU processors do for mining?
For instance, I just picked up an iMito (1.6Ghz Cortex A9 Dual Core). Any bitcoin miners for Android? Crazy low power consumption on these... though I did they have any processing power to them.
AMD APUs work individually as a supplement to a GPU miner. I have access to an A8-3850 (6550D) that gets about 62Mhash/s, which adds to the 280 I get on my 6870. I think it only adds 17W over idle draw as well, since the computer is always on. Trinity does better but I'm not sure by how much. I wouldn't buy APU systems solely to mine, though.
ARMs (and CPU-based mining in general) aren't worth doing. An A9 1.2GHz Cortex on a Galaxy SII gets a whopping 1.2MHash/s.
yeah I cancelled my preorder that was supposedly coming in november, about 2 weeks ago
As of January 1, 2013 there are no ASIC products shipping yet, nor have they been publicly used in mining.
Below is a recapitulation of all currently publicly available information as of November 25, 2012.