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7 октября, 2023 в 7:40 пп #43725teresitaclampУчастник
<br> What is the Lightning Network and how can it help Bitcoin scale? We also know VISA processed 138.3 billion transactions in 2019. With the help of these numbers, it is possible to compare both networks and show that Bitcoin is extremely more energy intensive per transaction than VISA. Recently, however, China cracked down on mining out of concerns about cryptocurrency’s financial risks and enormous energy consumption that works against China’s goal to be carbon neutral by 2060. As a result, many Chinese bitcoin miners are trying to move operations to other countries, like Kazakhstan, which relies mainly on fossil fuels for electricity, and the U.S. There have been disputes between miners and locals, bankruptcies and bribery attempts, lawsuits, even a kind of intensifying guerrilla warfare between local utility crews and a shadowy army of bootleg miners who set up their servers in basements and garages and max out the local electrical grids. As we can see, this means as long as Bitcoin nodes are allowed to max out at least 4 cores of the machines they run on, we will not run out of CPU capacity for signature checking unless Bitcoin is handling 100 times as much traffic as PayPa<br>p><br>p> The primary purpose of mining is to allow Bitcoin nodes to reach a secure, tamper-resistant consensus. Brock Tice, who mines bitcoins in St. Paul, Minn., has a whole room stuffed full of enough mining computers to heat his office in the winter. Above all, you needed a location that could handle a lot of electricity-a quarter of a megawatt, maybe, or even a half a megawatt, enough to light up a couple hundred homes. Today, a half-megawatt mine, Miehe says, «is nothing.» The commercial miners now pouring into the valley are building sites with tens of thousands of servers and electrical loads of as much as 30 megawatts, or enough to power a neighborhood of 13,000 homes. The main use of blockchain technology now is to keep a growing electronic ledger of every single bitcoin transaction ever made. Generating a single bitcoin takes a lot more servers than it used to-and a lot more power. Bitcoin mining-the complex process in which computers solve a complicated math puzzle to win a stack of virtual currency-uses an inordinate amount of electricity, and thanks to five hydroelectric dams that straddle this stretch of the river, about three hours east of Seattle, miners could buy that power more cheaply here than anywhere else in the natio<br>p><br>p> Distinctive Traality feature is a unique in-browser code editor that allows you to code even the most complex strategies in Python. Even as cryptocurrency enthusiasts have flocked to the region, many locals remain skeptical about what the Bitcoin boom will mean for the area’s economy. J: I mean they are missing everything. And squarely between these two competing narratives are the communities of the Mid-Columbia Basin, which find themselves anxiously trying to answer a question that for most of the rest of us is merely an amusing abstraction: Is bitcoin for real? But the basin, 바이낸스 입금하는법 (anotepad.com) by dint of its early start, has emerged as one of the biggest boomtowns. More broadly, the region is watching uneasily as one of its biggest natural resources-a gigantic surplus of hydroelectric power-is inhaled by a sector that barely existed five years ago and which is routinely derided as the next dot-com bust, or this century’s version of the Dutch tulip craze, or, as New York Times columnist Paul Krugman put it in January, a Ponzi scheme. Paul Roberts is a journalist in Seattle who writes about technology, business and politic<br>/p>
For years, few residents really grasped how appealing their region was to miners, who mainly did their esoteric calculations quietly tucked away in warehouses and basements. Across the three rural counties of the Mid-Columbia Basin-Chelan, Douglas and Grant-orchards and farm fields now share the rolling landscape with mines of every size, from industrial-scale facilities to repurposed warehouses to cargo containers and even backyard sheds. Long before locals had even heard the words «cryptocurrency» or «blockchain,» Miehe and his peers realized that this semi-arid agricultural region known as the Mid-Columbia Basin was the best place to mine bitcoin in America-and maybe the world. The Mid-Columbia Basin isn’t the only location where the virtual realm of cryptocurrency is colliding with the real world of megawatts and real estate. They believe not only that cryptocurrency will make them personally very wealthy, but also that this formerly out-of-the-way region has a real shot at becoming a center-and maybe the center-of a coming technology revolution, with the well-paid jobs and tech-fueled prosperity that usually flow only to gilded «knowledge» hubs like Seattle and San Francisco. Over the past two years, and especially during 2017, when the price of a single bitcoin jumped from $1,000 to more than $19,000, the region has taken on the vibe of a <br>town. -
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