Popular Topics
5 stars based on
56 reviews
The simplest way this can be achieved is to send the ether mined on each client machine to a master wallet either on one of the mining computers or to a wallet on a non-mining computer. Just make a manual payment, no need to set up a script to do this.
Another option multi computer bitcoin mining to have one wallet on either a mining computer or a non-mining computer and have all your miners mine to that one wallet they'll need to be on the same network, and it's more complicated to set up. Both of these situations mean you will be doing what is called solo-mining. Unless you have a high hashrate you're going to want to use a multi computer bitcoin mining. No, multi computer bitcoin mining don't work.
Claymore has a remote management tool, that's the only one I'm aware of, Genoil and Claymore have failover stuff. It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons! March in Mining. If I would be mining with multiple machines, what would the simples way to 'combine' the results? Without having to worry about ether being stuck on the client its mined with.
I guess there are multiple ways to achieve this: I think that the thinking goes that Ethereum's short block times will negate any benefits of a mining pool.
I suspect that in practice, people might figure out new ways to win more blocks involving multiple computers. But this point, it might be too early to really know how to maximize your mining multi computer bitcoin mining. I would like to know a more concrete answer to this as well. Mining on pools simply provides smooth steady payouts. If you are solo-mining multi computer bitcoin mining on your hashrate you multi computer bitcoin mining go a long time without finding a block but with a pool you'll know when you get paid.
Over time the expected payout is the same for solo-mining and pool mining for any given your hashrate. Your luck is just a function of your total hashrate. Luck comes into play if you're solo-mining because you could have bad luck and go for a while without finding a block or you could be lucky and find a block back to back. It all averages multi computer bitcoin mining over time. The situation that you are describing, having many people on different networks, mine to a central location is pool mining.
You can set up your own pool. If ether allows multi computer bitcoin mining the easiest way for you to do this is to set up a p2pool. No need to pay someone to set this up, it's open source on github and directions are out there and meets all your requirements listed. If ether doesn't allow p2pool then you can set up a mpos pool, which is what a lot of the commercial pools will be using.
Mpos is also open source, though I've never set one of these up, I think it's easily doable. Mining with your phone is going to be more gimmick than anything, you'll want to keep track of electrical usage to see if it's even worth it for you to mine on any device if not you could mine for speculation Or you could you mine at a loss just because you like the idea and potential ether has.
If you guys already have your hardware, I think it would be worth it to start mining some coin to multi computer bitcoin mining your feet wet with wallets, different software, networking, etc Your best chance to turn a profit will be right when mining is opened up.
March edited March I would love to test out my setup, but right now I am having trouble understanding how to try a GPU on the testnet. If you could point me to some resources on how to test my GPU, I would really appreciate it. I'm running Ubuntu I don't have any practical experience with nvidia, only amd, but it's generally the same just different software.
As far as I know there is no gpu miner for ether yet, I could multi computer bitcoin mining wrong though. So you'll want to find a coin to test. You can find the most profitable coins to mine here http: It's not something that needs to be added in with an upgrade or something. In fact just perusing here https: That blog post states this. A third factor is convenience; this can best be solved by funding an easy-to-use open-source make-your-own mining pool solution, in a similar spirit to the software used by many small VPS providers; if deemed important, we may end up partially funding a network-agnostic version of such an effort.
So at least as of June 19th, it was still up in the air. I just found that stuff in the last multi computer bitcoin mining minutes so there may be a better answer out there, but it looks like the developers want pool mining available but not highly centralized pool mining, which is nothing new.
Tough to do with so many smart people figuring out ways to game each other. Anyway I'm going to keep looking around because I may set up a p2pool if mining ether is profitable. I'll post if I find anything useful. April edited April Possibly if you're using a pool that accepts stale shares and shares that have the incorrect nonce.
It does have a lot more features however. Sign In or Register to comment.