Transaction

2b069b9b99920fee4e2fa3b8be792a5cb3c8b4b2133234fa7ec8868fb9b9cfb5
Timestamp (utc)
2024-05-07 23:16:22
Fee Paid
0.00000018 BSV
(
0.00021773 BSV
-
0.00021755 BSV
)
Fee Rate
2.171 sat/KB
Version
1
Confirmations
90,520
Size Stats
8,291 B

3 Outputs

Total Output:
0.00021755 BSV
  • jmeta"1HQ2hvQJwTDtVZoL6aEMEyhQ4qzGi9aRZb@e2da367ed3104451fc35dc1d45fb77f0d8be52d20dfff692620e9f363e5af7earss.item metarss.netMó<item> <itunes:title>Kurt Wuckert Jr: Think of Bitcoin mining as financial self-discipline</itunes:title> <title>Kurt Wuckert Jr: Think of Bitcoin mining as financial self-discipline</title> <description><![CDATA[<p>When you set up a blockchain mining pool, there’s plenty of complicated technology involved. And if it’s just you and a few colleagues and friends, when you switch it on for the first time, it’s not immediately obvious whether it’s working. Your computers have to compete with others on the network – the Bitcoin SV network in this case – to ‘win’ the next block on the blockchain. But are they in the game? </p><p> At the start of his GorillaPool enterprise, its founder Kurt Wuckert Jr. says, “we weren&apos;t even sure if we would build a block. We didn&apos;t know that we had it right. And then within about an hour of us putting it up, we found a block, which was our only indicator”.</p><p>It was the fulfilment of a long-held ambition for Kurt, CEO of GorillaPool, as he explains on this week’s CoinGeek Conversations; “I was very interested in doing some of these things that I&apos;ve theorised in Bitcoin for a very long time and said, you know ‘what we need is an active public pool in BSV. We need a pool that is run for the sake of doing cool stuff …I really wanted to test theories and really push the limits of Bitcoin.”</p><p>A mining pool combines the efforts of a group of mining computers, sharing the rewards between members whenever any of them wins a block. GorillaPool is open to all: you can join up your own computer to the pool - but we’re talking industrial strength computers here, not just your laptop - or you can pay Kurt and his colleagues to set it up for you, renting the hardware and running it. It will cost you between $3,000 and $10,000 depending on market conditions, to put yourself into the Bitcoin business.</p><p>As to whether or not it is profitable, Kurt says that depends on timing: the price of the specialised ASIC chips that power mining computers fluctuates with the market price of Bitcoin - because everyone wants them when it’s profitable to mine. So Kurt’s advice is to buy your equipment when the market is low, and sell when it’s high:</p><p>“I&apos;ve been in mining since 2013, and so this is now my fourth bear market. And what I&apos;ve seen is that the people that really grow are the people that at the top of the bull market are selling their coins, but they&apos;re also selling off their fleet. They&apos;re selling their ASICs because they might have bought an asset for $2,000 at the bottom of the bear market, but they can sell it used for eight to $10,000. And it&apos;s going to be obsolete in the next cycle anyway …And so if you do that, I&apos;ve seen a lot of people do really well.”</p><p>If you have faith in the long-term value of Bitcoin SV, would you be better off simply buying some when the market is low, and waiting it out? Kurt believes mining is a better option because it forces a kind of self-discipline, making you, effectively, invest regularly, in the form of electricity bills to keep your computers running, and reaping the occasional reward when the pool wins a block. No matter how you might intend to make regular savings, it usually doesn’t happen, but if you’re in a mining pool, it happens by default: “it really is the opportunity to just put it on cruise control, let it do the work and it&apos;s disciplined for you”.</p><p><em>On next week’s CoinGeek Conversations, Kurt talks about one of his other roles, as CoinGeek’s Chief Bitcoin Historian. </em></p><p><b> </b></p><p><br/></p><p><b> </b></p><p><br/></p><p><b> </b></p><p><b><br/></b><br/></p>]]></description> <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When you set up a blockchain mining pool, there’s plenty of complicated technology involved. And if it’s just you and a few colleagues and friends, when you switch it on for the first time, it’s not immediately obvious whether it’s working. Your computers have to compete with others on the network – the Bitcoin SV network in this case – to ‘win’ the next block on the blockchain. But are they in the game? </p><p> At the start of his GorillaPool enterprise, its founder Kurt Wuckert Jr. says, “we weren&apos;t even sure if we would build a block. We didn&apos;t know that we had it right. And then within about an hour of us putting it up, we found a block, which was our only indicator”.</p><p>It was the fulfilment of a long-held ambition for Kurt, CEO of GorillaPool, as he explains on this week’s CoinGeek Conversations; “I was very interested in doing some of these things that I&apos;ve theorised in Bitcoin for a very long time and said, you know ‘what we need is an active public pool in BSV. We need a pool that is run for the sake of doing cool stuff …I really wanted to test theories and really push the limits of Bitcoin.”</p><p>A mining pool combines the efforts of a group of mining computers, sharing the rewards between members whenever any of them wins a block. GorillaPool is open to all: you can join up your own computer to the pool - but we’re talking industrial strength computers here, not just your laptop - or you can pay Kurt and his colleagues to set it up for you, renting the hardware and running it. It will cost you between $3,000 and $10,000 depending on market conditions, to put yourself into the Bitcoin business.</p><p>As to whether or not it is profitable, Kurt says that depends on timing: the price of the specialised ASIC chips that power mining computers fluctuates with the market price of Bitcoin - because everyone wants them when it’s profitable to mine. So Kurt’s advice is to buy your equipment when the market is low, and sell when it’s high:</p><p>“I&apos;ve been in mining since 2013, and so this is now my fourth bear market. And what I&apos;ve seen is that the people that really grow are the people that at the top of the bull market are selling their coins, but they&apos;re also selling off their fleet. They&apos;re selling their ASICs because they might have bought an asset for $2,000 at the bottom of the bear market, but they can sell it used for eight to $10,000. And it&apos;s going to be obsolete in the next cycle anyway …And so if you do that, I&apos;ve seen a lot of people do really well.”</p><p>If you have faith in the long-term value of Bitcoin SV, would you be better off simply buying some when the market is low, and waiting it out? Kurt believes mining is a better option because it forces a kind of self-discipline, making you, effectively, invest regularly, in the form of electricity bills to keep your computers running, and reaping the occasional reward when the pool wins a block. No matter how you might intend to make regular savings, it usually doesn’t happen, but if you’re in a mining pool, it happens by default: “it really is the opportunity to just put it on cruise control, let it do the work and it&apos;s disciplined for you”.</p><p><em>On next week’s CoinGeek Conversations, Kurt talks about one of his other roles, as CoinGeek’s Chief Bitcoin Historian. </em></p><p><b> </b></p><p><br/></p><p><b> </b></p><p><br/></p><p><b> </b></p><p><b><br/></b><br/></p>]]></content:encoded> <itunes:image href="https://storage.buzzsprout.com/c0ijvinymx55dwz17qzg7a13u07i?.jpg"/> <itunes:author>CoinGeek</itunes:author> <enclosure url="https://www.buzzsprout.com/241544/12352933-kurt-wuckert-jr-think-of-bitcoin-mining-as-financial-self-discipline.mp3" length="21004093" type="audio/mpeg"/> <guid isPermaLink="false">Buzzsprout-12352933</guid> <pubDate>Thu, 02 Mar 2023 08:00:00 +0000</pubDate> <itunes:duration>1747</itunes:duration> <itunes:keywords/> <itunes:season>9</itunes:season> <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode> <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType> <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit> </item>
    https://whatsonchain.com/tx/2b069b9b99920fee4e2fa3b8be792a5cb3c8b4b2133234fa7ec8868fb9b9cfb5