I though that I was able to see sarcasm without the (/s). I'm not sure anymore.Some people still need the heat (by-product).
I though that I was able to see sarcasm without the (/s). I'm not sure anymore.Some people still need the heat (by-product).
Some people still need the heat (by-product).
The algorithms are designed to reduce the coins you get if more people start mining a coin. So if 10 people mine Moonbogcoin, they'll each get fewer coins per hour mining than if 5 people mine that coin. And the price of coins is of course a matter of supply and demand as well, so if more coins get mined, the price will go down.
I don't think cryptocoins work that way. The are not really a product like a toaster oven or sports car, but act more like a monetary unit, or perhaps a even a natural resource. Supply and demand does not work the same for those items because they have no demand limit. They instead can better be viewed with the inflation model. In this case the supply of coins is regulated by the algorithm that is limiting coin creation, therefore stabilizing the coin value. What will matter is use for the coin as a monetary unit, not how much of it is out there. The world economy can absorb more then they can likely produce, and hardly notice. If goods and services can easily be exchanged for the coin, it's value will increase even if the supply is high.
Some people still need the heat (by-product).
And amd.com has 6750xt, 6900xt, and 6950xt in stock.Amazon had a 6900 XT for $899. That's below MSRP.
Darn shame they don't ship to AustraliaAnd amd.com has 6750xt, 6900xt, and 6950xt in stock.
Larry, it's still much more effective, efficient and economic to run that electricity through a heatpump if you're just after heat.
No mining required. That way of heating only makes sense if you have practically free electricity.
Yeah, about that... I suspect Larry lives in an apartment where he currently has electric heat. You can't just run to Home Depot and buy an portable heat pump because they won't work below 40 F. I suppose retrofitting might be possible but a LL isn't doing that as long as the tenant (or maybe in Larry's case, the Government, lol) is paying for the electricity. But either way, if he wasn't mining, he'd be using electricity literally doing nothing.
Yeah, about that... I suspect Larry lives in an apartment where he currently has electric heat.
You can't just run to Home Depot and buy an portable heat pump because they won't work below 40 F. I suppose retrofitting might be possible but a LL isn't doing that as long as the tenant (or maybe in Larry's case, the Government, lol) is paying for the electricity. But either way, if he wasn't mining, he'd be using electricity literally doing nothing.
That might be some of it but not all. I did comparison of the price of the 5800x in Denmark and US and a 3080 and the DKK to USD for the 5800X was 8.11, while it is 8.55 for the 3080. The exchange rate is around 7, but we have a much higher sales tax than US.The exchange rate of the euro and DKK to the dollar has been getting worse for some time now, so I expect inflated prices in Europe to persist until the exchange rate improves.
The exchange rate of the euro and DKK to the dollar has been getting worse for some time now, so I expect inflated prices in Europe to persist until the exchange rate improves.
I read somewhere that Norway is dependent on Denmark. Norway also has plenty of oil. Have they raised their prices for you guys, or is there some reason for not buying oil from them?We've just hit peak gas prices ever here.
I read somewhere that Norway is dependent on Denmark. Norway also has plenty of oil. Have they raised their prices for you guys, or is there some reason for not buying oil from them?
Have graphics card prices returned to normal in the US? I bought an R9 380X for £202 (UKP) in 2016 for myself and spent about £240 for a 1060 in the same year for a customer.
I don't know what the AMD equivalent is right now (judging by prices it's the 6600XT?), but a 3060Ti seems to be £465 here.
Kind of depends, we are more or less retail price but that price has been elevated.Have graphics card prices returned to normal in the US? I bought an R9 380X for £202 (UKP) in 2016 for myself and spent about £240 for a 1060 in the same year for a customer.
I don't know what the AMD equivalent is right now (judging by prices it's the 6600XT?), but a 3060Ti seems to be £465 here.
JPR: GPU market is slowing down, shipments decreased by -19% year-to-year - VideoCardz.com
"Uh pick me - pick me" - Maybe stop sellling nearly two year old videocards well above MSRP prices?
Prices will absolutely not go down next generation. AMD and Nvidia learned theres no reason to undersell themselves after what happened the last ~18 months.What? The prices are fine compared to what the 4000 series will cost. People will be tripping over themselves to buy a 3080Ti for $1500 when they see how much the 4080 is going to cost. When a 3080 equivalent 4000 series card costs as much as a 3080, you may as well buy a 3080? I predict the RTX 4080 will cost $10,000 and it might as damn well as far as I'm concerned, because I'm not paying whatever price hike they're going for. If prices don't go DOWN this generation, I'm out.
Prices will absolutely not go down next generation. AMD and Nvidia learned theres no reason to undersell themselves after what happened the last ~18 months.