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Comment Re:The thing with no intrinsic worth... (Score 1) 8

Nice bunch of extreme lies you have there. Not any surprise.

Here is the first one: In actual reality, the industrial value of gold is not far from its market price. Typically about 50% of it. Do you really think it would get used in industrial applications if it was 100x more expensive than the value using it provides?

Comment Re:Rust is not magic, but it helps (Score 1) 20

I agree. To do C well you have to be very disciplined and add a lot of design patterns that are unnecessary if your main going is just making something work. It's exactly the same with JS (hence why Typescript and endless libraries are so popular).

As you move into application level code it all becomes quite tiresome. Doing basic things requires dealing with clunky designed object models which slow you down at best, and can trip up the inexperienced at worst.

C++ at least provides better tools for structuring code, but it also doesn't really enforce any canonical methods but instead throws a whole lot of different methods at you (because that's really the aim of the language). The end result is extremely dangerous.

I don't like the fanaticism around rust, but i can see the point of the language. It does appear to be a better option than C++ at least, and ultimately nobody is ever going to replace C for where it is really needed as it does this job so well.

Comment Re:No! But Greed Is. (Score 1) 58

Also infrastructure dollars spent on data centers are not spent on more useful projects.

It doesn't have to be a zero-sum game but it is. It is extremely hard to get the billionaires to allow us to spend any money on infrastructure. They do it begrudgingly and in exchange for huge amounts of free money. The last major push for infrastructure in America was in the mid 1980s when the Democrat party compromised with Ronald Reagan giving Reagan all the military spending he wanted in exchange for 1 trillion dollars worth of infrastructure spending to build out much needed cities. If you're over 50 that's why and how you are able to afford to buy a house.

I think one of the things that confuses economists is that the economy shouldn't be a zero-sum game and you're taught that it's not but in practice because of the bizarre political realities it is.

Comment Re: Socks for RHCP. (Score 1) 28

If they wanted to really define new categories and make waves again they would bring back Scott Forstall and someone as good as Johnny Ive and let them clash. Those arguments made Apple their first trillion. Tim Cook was a peace maker. Steve Jobs was THE referee. The competition between those two are why we have an iPhone like we do today.

Comment Re:"Windows is evolving into an agentic OS," (Score 1) 38

I just really wish that the world could just pick one distro and go with it.

I get that techies like the ability to pick their favorite distro and I get that Ubuntu is gotten close to being the default but in practice it's not.

There really needs to be a consistent way to install and deploy software and a consistent set of tools and libraries for accessing things like audio and video and for programming things like basic UI components.

If Linux could just settle on one distro and maybe two or three desktops (a light one, the heavy one for mainline desktops and maybe one for mobile and tablet) I think it could capture a lot more market share. Sort of like how stuff like ruby on rails and a lot of frameworks get popular because while they might not do things the best they just pick a way to do something and go with it.

Choice paralysis combined with diluting the developer pool creates all sorts of problems at this junction.

And I really really want a good competitor for Windows. Because holy crap Windows 11 is terrible. It is the most user hostile software I have ever seen in my life.

Comment Re:Unclear on the concept... (Score 1) 60

If the number of miners went down, would it really be easier to mine?

There's an interesting chart here showing the relationship between the market value and the mining hashrate. Less people mining does cause the difficulty to drop, but realistically we're talking small fluctuations - not anything that would suddenly make this gimmick of a heater profitable.

Comment Re:The "Bitcoin heater" is (mostly) snake oil (Score 1) 60

It really doesn't matter what they put out, all resistive heaters are 100% efficient (any inefficiency would result in heat anyway).

The idea being that a $70 1,500w heater isn't any better than a $20 1,500w heater, at least as far as producing heat goes. The more expensive ones might have a more accurate thermostat or produce less noise, but none of the typical resistance heaters sold at big box retailers give you any extra heat for your buck (damn those pesky laws of physics).

I don't see where marketing heat from a miner is any worse than the "Amish space heaters" which sell for $500 and make invalid claims about having better efficiency than a $40 milk house heater.

It depends entirely on if you consider the $900 for the Bitcoin heater a sunk cost, and also the fact that you're only actually getting 400w of heat from the Bitcoin miner - the remainder of the heat output is produced by a standard resistance heat strip. Meaning you'd have to actually buy four of those Bitcoin heaters in order to get 1,600w of heat, spending a total of $3,600.

There actually are portable heat pumps on Amazon for under $500. While they won't mine any Bitcoin, heat pumps will produce way more heat per kWh and that's ultimately all that matters when you're comparing it against a mining rig being operated at a loss. They also double as air conditioners during the warmer parts of the year, while the Bitcoin heater sits around collecting dust.

Comment Re:Unclear on the concept... (Score 1) 60

And if mining rigs didn't pay for themselves (where do you think new Bitcoin comes from?), no one would buy them (except other idiot "clinical associate professors").

If you pay normal US utility rates for electricity, you presently can't mine Bitcoin profitably. You're just effectively buying coinage through your power bill, on top of whatever you paid for the mining hardware. As per the article, this just results in slightly discounted heat, and there are better ways of achieving that end.

As to where new Bitcoin comes from, the amount of Bitcoin mined always stays the same regardless of the number of miners participating. The concept of having lots of people all attempting to be lucky enough to find the next block is only what secures the blockchain, with the mining difficulty automatically adjusting itself in response to changes in total network hashrate. Generally, there's also a bit of a human aspect involved as people won't mine when it's not profitable to do so, with the network hashrate dropping in response to declines in Bitcoin's trading value, and miners coming online as the value rises.

The short of it is, the network already is made up of miners willing to eek by at the tiniest sliver of profit imaginable. If you join in, you're fighting for your own slice of a pie that has already been divided down to atoms. Good luck.

Comment Wrong Algorithm (Score 1) 60

Bitcoin relies entirely on SHA256 ASIC's for hashing and they typically need replacing every year or two because more efficient models come out making the old ones unprofitable, especially at halvings. Due to the RoI and first-mover advantage the profitable ones are very expensive.

If you want to heat your home with proof-of-work, use a coin that uses RandomX or some other deliberately ASIC-resistant algorithm (usually CPU mining).

You can pool mine on an old CPU and still get a few pennies for your efforts, though if you want to invest in an EPYC and have other uses for it (maybe you have work jobs to run during the day and want more heat on cold nights) it could actually be profitable.

Resistive electric heating is still a very expensive way to heat, though some people don't have better options. There's a development near where I am that was built shortly after Nixon announced Project Independence and every house (cold climate) has wall-to-wall electric baseboard heating.

Comment Re:Unclear on the concept... (Score 4, Insightful) 60

Better to have a Bitcoin mining rig generating it than a nichrome wire.

The problem is that the mining hardware costs more than the amount it of Bitcoin it will ever generate in a reasonable amount of years, even if you're getting your electricity for free.

Realistically, this is one of those rare occasions where the first post nailed it - if you need heat, it's hard to beat the bang for your buck from a heat pump. Except maybe with one of those cheap Chinese diesel heaters, if somehow you have access to free fuel like this guy.

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