Ilan na po ba naipon niyo po sa xmr mining?

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pano isagad sir?
max setting sa config halimbawa 3vcpu gawin mo 4 threads with 100%cpu usage ang config tsaka gamit ka ng high-end na port, 1-4hrs mataas pa yan ang hashrate mga 800-900h/s per droplet pag abot ng 5-10hrs bababa nayan sa optimal mga 400-600h/s kasi di kaya sa 3vcpu and so on. tsaka nakakalock ng account.
 
Wala naman sa port kung gaano ka taas yung Hashrate
Every port has different difficulty, hashes are just a graph therefore a high pool (e.i port) difficulty is for high power mining equipment. What this does is lowers the bandwidth amount for both the pool and the miner. Because the difficulty is higher, the miner will find valid shares less frequently, resulting in less data transmitted from the miner to the pool.

Lower difficulties are for lower powered mining equipment, so that the miner has a chance to submit some valid shares before the next network block is found, and it has to start the hashing process over again for the new block. If no shares are submitted by a miner between blocks, that miner will get no credit for the mined block. This is why pools have several different difficulty levels.

Typically pool payouts are weighted on the number of shares per miner, while those shares are weighted on the difficulty setting, so a low difficulty share is worth less than a high difficulty share.

1 difficulty = 1 share
If you'll monitor the submitted shares from your miner and it's submitting a below average shares (low difficulty) in a certain time (from the time when the pool gives you block to solve until the time when it'll be submitted) the network hashrate graph can tell what hashrate you're on to. The pool hashrate graph are different from the worker hashrate (miner), only it can tell your hashrate if your worker/miner submitted a certain difficulty in a certain time.
 
Every port has different difficulty, hashes are just a graph therefore a high pool (e.i port) difficulty is for high power mining equipment. What this does is lowers the bandwidth amount for both the pool and the miner. Because the difficulty is higher, the miner will find valid shares less frequently, resulting in less data transmitted from the miner to the pool.

Lower difficulties are for lower powered mining equipment, so that the miner has a chance to submit some valid shares before the next network block is found, and it has to start the hashing process over again for the new block. If no shares are submitted by a miner between blocks, that miner will get no credit for the mined block. This is why pools have several different difficulty levels.

Typically pool payouts are weighted on the number of shares per miner, while those shares are weighted on the difficulty setting, so a low difficulty share is worth less than a high difficulty share.

1 difficulty = 1 share
If you'll monitor the submitted shares from your miner and it's submitting a below average shares (low difficulty) in a certain time (from the time when the pool gives you block to solve until the time when it'll be submitted) the network hashrate graph can tell what hashrate you're on to. The pool hashrate graph are different from the worker hashrate (miner), only it can tell your hashrate if your worker/miner submitted a certain difficulty in a certain time.
wala naman masyadong difference para sa miner namin.
 
pede rin po ba i-run ung mga miner nyo sa normal na PC unit?

Offtopic: Hindi po ako nakaksunod, pero pa bookmark lang po muna. TY
 
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