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There are specific mining algorithms - they do nothing else but mine crypto. Just restricting / disabling the Ethereum (Ethash) algorithm alone in consumer graphics cards could make a huge difference. No need to restrict anything else.
There are specific mining algorithms - they do nothing else but mine crypto. Just restricting / disabling the Ethereum (Ethash) algorithm alone in consumer graphics cards could make a huge difference. No need to restrict anything else.
But what makes your purpose for the card more important than someone whose purpose is to mine Ethereum with it?
I think the best compromise is for gamers / professionals to buy standard graphics cards, and for crypto miners to use dedicated mining GPUs or ASICs.
I think the best compromise is for gamers / professionals to buy standard graphics cards, and for crypto miners to use dedicated mining GPUs or ASICs. Hopefully, there will be sufficient supply to meet the requirements of both types of customer.
Both use cases are equally unimportant. This whole thread is daft.But what makes your purpose for the card more important than someone whose purpose is to mine Ethereum with it?
And yet, here we are, discussing something that is apparently unimportantBoth use cases are equally unimportant. This whole thread is daft.
So, greed and profit are Nvidia's and AMD's only long term considerations?
And yet, here we are, discussing something that is apparently unimportant![]()
Not at all. GPUs are multi-purpose devices and outside-the-box use is what has led to emerging fields like machine learning and the development of neural nets. GPU role in cryptocurrency is another aspect of this and users must be free to use their hardware as they wish. If this creates new fields that in turn mean it's harder for us to source our gaming cards, so be it. And this is coming from someone who has bought every Nvidia Titan ever released (and mutiples of most of them) and used them for gaming. So it's as much a pain for me as anyone when new toys are hard to source.
Let people be creative with their tech - whether it be trying to help cancer research or founding new types of money or whatever else.
If you try and lock down GPUs too much to a specific purpose you risk stifling the next revolution and I don't think that's what Nvidia want to do. Of course, having dedicated mining cards or CAD-work cards, etc. helps meet demand in specific sector by creating purpose-built tools. But the fundamentals of a gpu should be kept multi-purpose.
Is that how it works?And again you've ignored the fact there is no resale value in mining GPUs, therefore no serious mining outfit would consider them
So the firmware update would be a mandatory Windows 10 update, and would either disable Ethereum mining altogether or wreck the crypto hash rate of GPUs. It would be applied in the factory to new graphics cards.
It could also be applied to Linux distributions and Windows 7 if needed. In my view, this would be a fair restriction, because these graphics cards weren't intended or designed for GPU crypto mining.
It would be applied /checked whenever an internet connection if detected.
It would only be applied to ordinary graphics cards - Mining dedicated graphics cards would be unaffected, like the MSI Ampere mining GPUs.
Stopping miners from buying cards won't fix the shortage. Go shout at amd and nvidia instead.