Raspberry Pi Nexus NXS Miner

Raspberry Pi Nexus NXS Miner

How To Become Electroneum ETN Miner In India.

Maybe most of you were waiting for this news: thanks to the recent t, there’s official as well as for LG Nexus 5 phone, among other new hardware support. Here a short overview of the new 29 ARM supported platforms: – ZTE ZX296718 SoC 64-bit support.

– The Broadcom BCM47189 and BCM53573 are supported as the first ARM SoCs with integrated 802.11ac WiFi networking. – Renesas r8a7796 (R-Car M3-W) platform support. – Amlogic meson-gxbb (S905) supports more drivers. – Nextthing GR8 platform support, making use of the kernel’s Allwinner code as close relatives to the A13/R8 chips. – The DeviceTree conversion for mach-omap2 is complete, including full support for the Nokia N900.

Einsteinium EMC2 Online Mining Free. Maybe most of you were waiting for this news: thanks to the recent Linux4.9 kernel development, there's official mainline Raspberry Pi Zero support as well as for LG.

– The Marvell Armada 8040 development board is supported with its quad-core Cortex-A72 processors and 3 x 10Gbit Ethernet interfaces. – The Qualcomm DragonBoard 820c 96Boards platform is now supported by the mainline Linux kernel. – The Rockchip Tronsmart Orion r86 set-top box is now supported as an Android-powered set-top box powered by an 8-core RK3368 SoC. – THe Qualcomm External Bus Interface 2 (EBI2) is now supported as what’s used by some mobile phones for connecting flash memory, LCD displays, and other peripherals.

– New mainline Allwinner board support includes the Empire Electronix M712 and iNet d978 Rev2 tablets; Orange Pi PC Plus, Orange Pi 2, Orange Pi Plus 2E, Orange Pi Lite, Olimex A33-Olinuxino, and Nano Pi Neo single-board computers. – New mainline Broadcom board support includes the Broadcom: BCM958525er, BCM958522er, BCM988312hr, BCM958623hr and BCM958622hr reference boards for Northstar platform; Raspberry Pi Zero single-board computer.

– The Netgear WNR854T router is now supported by the mainline kernel. – The LG Nexus 5 phone is supported by the mainline kernel.

I'm currently mining Magi using 4 zeros and a pi3 At the moment It's NOT profitable by any means, but things can change and it's not adding a huge amount to my electricity bill. It's a nice hobby. Quick stats on my 4 zeros: 2 x rpi0w = 0.71 khash/s 2 x rpi0 = 0.69 khash/s In total they are pulling 5.28v @ 0.99a = 5.17w so uses a kw/h in 8 days Pi3 gives me 11 khash/s don't have an energy meter attached to it so not 100% sure of it's usage. It currently taking me around 8-10 days to make a single magi coin.

Raspberry Pi Nexus NXS Miner

Each coin is roughly worth the same as I get charged for 1kwh of usage so it's safe to say I'm only getting back, at best, 50% of the costs. But the coin is slowly rising in price by few pence every week or so (Also might make a jump in price later this month!) So Coin-Magi is not a 'Get rich Quick' scheme! It's more of a slow steady increase over the long term. Tue Nov 07, 2017 3:25 pm I'm currently mining Magi using 4 zeros and a pi3 At the moment It's NOT profitable by any means, but things can change and it's not adding a huge amount to my electricity bill. It's a nice hobby. Quick stats on my 4 zeros: 2 x rpi0w = 0.71 khash/s 2 x rpi0 = 0.69 khash/s In total they are pulling 5.28v @ 0.99a = 5.17w so uses a kw/h in 8 days Pi3 gives me 11 khash/s don't have an energy meter attached to it so not 100% sure of it's usage.

It currently taking me around 8-10 days to make a single magi coin. Each coin is roughly worth the same as I get charged for 1kwh of usage so it's safe to say I'm only getting back, at best, 50% of the costs. But the coin is slowly rising in price by few pence every week or so (Also might make a jump in price later this month!) So Coin-Magi is not a 'Get rich Quick' scheme! It's more of a slow steady increase over the long term. Thanks, what are your electricity costs per kwh?

Also, because of the more powerful? Cpu and more ram, would the pi3 have better or worse hash rate/electricity usage? Wed Nov 08, 2017 3:28 pm quick 'n' dirty calculations: the Pi3 uses 1kw/h in 10 days @ 11.0khash/s 4 x zero uses 1kw/h in 8 days @ 2.8khash/s So with the higher hash rate of 11khash/s the pi3 is the more efficient choice. Will have a better write up at the weekend, with the amount of coin generated per device, that will give a better indication So at £0.16 per KWh that's £5.76 for 360 days. How do you know it's using 1KWh in ten days - have you measured it?

Presumably so, using the USB energy meter mentioned previously in this thread. Not that they are always that accurate. Thu Nov 09, 2017 6:16 am Presumably so, using the USB energy meter mentioned previously in this thread. Not that they are always that accurate.

But that's never going to be accurate as it gives an instantaneous value. You need to track power usage over time to get an average, it's probably a good idea to track CPU busy over the same timebase. Then you can come up with a microwatts value that correlates to CPU busy. From there it's simple maths to get an annual cost versus number of hashes calculated for the blockchain currency you're attempting to mine. Thu Nov 09, 2017 6:16 am Presumably so, using the USB energy meter mentioned previously in this thread. Not that they are always that accurate.

But that's never going to be accurate as it gives an instantaneous value. You need to track power usage over time to get an average, it's probably a good idea to track CPU busy over the same timebase. Then you can come up with a microwatts value that correlates to CPU busy. From there it's simple maths to get an annual cost versus number of hashes calculated for the blockchain currency you're attempting to mine. Most of them also give a cumulative power usage figure in mAh too. Tue Nov 07, 2017 3:25 pm Pi3 gives me 11 khash/s don't have an energy meter attached to it so not 100% sure of it's usage.

How do you achieve 11 Kash/s? I've just compiled it, and it runs @ 4.4Khash (4*1.1). Did you use special compile options?

Thanks Nothing special other than using the 64bit OS And this version of the miner: Compile it as normal (In the first Makefile change the “-march=native” to “-mcpu=cortex-a53” ) then run as normal. I'm NOT overclocking it because i've only passive cooling with a heatsink.

It seem a bi of a waste to use extra power for a fan that can cancel out the gains from OC'ing Also the energy usage is 5.2v @ 0.74A giving 3.8w (+/-0.1w). Tue Nov 07, 2017 3:25 pm Pi3 gives me 11 khash/s don't have an energy meter attached to it so not 100% sure of it's usage. How do you achieve 11 Kash/s? I've just compiled it, and it runs @ 4.4Khash (4*1.1). Did you use special compile options? Thanks Nothing special other than using the 64bit OS And this version of the miner: Compile it as normal (In the first Makefile change the “-march=native” to “-mcpu=cortex-a53” ) then run as normal.

I'm NOT overclocking it because i've only passive cooling with a heatsink. It seem a bi of a waste to use extra power for a fan that can cancel out the gains from OC'ing Also the energy usage is 5.2v @ 0.74A giving 3.8w (+/-0.1w) Wow that's impressive! It seems that the 64bits OS improves the perfs a lot!