Transaction

1765f091ee81e075b68a8a62c4e09ad032c8f411c5c4dfb8f2c37ce38e6fd2cd
Timestamp (utc)
2024-03-22 06:18:28
Fee Paid
0.00000016 BSV
(
0.01138716 BSV
-
0.01138700 BSV
)
Fee Rate
10.65 sat/KB
Version
1
Confirmations
93,598
Size Stats
1,501 B

2 Outputs

Total Output:
0.01138700 BSV
  • j"1LAnZuoQdcKCkpDBKQMCgziGMoPC4VQUckMá<div class="post"><div class="quoteheader"><a href="https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=501.msg4995#msg4995">Quote from: Olipro on July 22, 2010, 09:49:07 AM</a></div><div class="quote">OK, I've made a new EXE, this one seems to get me an extra 100-200k (or about 25-50k per core).<br/><br/>Difference? I modified the ByteSwap function to operate on 64-bit integers; it does this by using the bswap intrinsic on a 64 bit register followed by rotate right through 32 bits to put the result in the correct order. it also initializes the SHA256 vectors using unsigned 64 bit values (however, the actual hashing still uses 32-bit so I doubt this is making much of a difference) and yes, I did convert the 32 bit numbers to 64 bit correctly (i.e. 0x12345678UL 0xabcdef0UL -&gt; 0xabcdef012345678ULL) if that appears wrong to you, think about how little endian machines store 32 bit integers in memory.<br/><br/>anyway, <span style="font-size: 20pt !important; line-height: 1.3em;"><a href="http://www.4shared.com/file/iHQA_p96/Bitcoin_Intel_x64_tweaked.html">grab it here</a></span><br/></div>I'll give this one a run, the last build would crash randomly after a few hours&nbsp; <img alt="Wink" border="0" src="/static/img/emoticons/wink.gif"/></div> text/html
    https://whatsonchain.com/tx/1765f091ee81e075b68a8a62c4e09ad032c8f411c5c4dfb8f2c37ce38e6fd2cd