Claymore Monero Pool Nvidia Miner Is Zcash For Mac

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Claymore monero pool nvidia miner is zcash for mac

. added Nicehash pool support. added shares validation on CPU and statistics for incorrect shares. fixed some critical bugs. now miner uses the latest framework which is used for dual and zec miners. Therefore several new options are available.

Claymore Monero Pool Nvidia Miner Is Zcash For Mac Mac

new assembler GPU kernels are used. added '-dmem' options that can improve performance in many cases.

Note that twice more GPU memory is used in this mode. some old options were removed, some were renamed, please read Readme for detailed information and samples. reduced devfee, it's 1% now if you use secure SSL/TLS connection, 1.5% for unsecure connection. devfee mining is executed every hour, similar to dual and zec miners.

a lot of minor improvements. Catalyst 15.12 is required for best performance and compatibility. Set 'GPUMAXALLOCPERCENT' environment variable as '100'. For multi-GPU systems, set Virtual Memory size in Windows at least 16 GB: 'Computer Properties / Advanced System Settings / Performance / Advanced / Virtual Memory'.

Monero

This miner is free-to-use, however, current developer fee is 2% if you use secure SSL/TLS connection to mining pool, miner mines 49 rounds for you and 1 round for developer. If you use unsecure connection to mining pool, current developer fee is 2.5%, miner mines 39 rounds for you and 1 round for developer. If you don't agree with the dev fee - don't use this miner, or use '-nofee' option.

Claymore Monero Pool Nvidia Miner Is Zcash For Mac Pro

Attempts to cheat and remove dev fee will cause a bit slower mining speed (same as '-nofee 1') though miner will show same hashrate. This version is for recent AMD videocards only: 7xxx and 2xx, also 6xxx and 5xxx. No nVidia support. This version is for Windows x64 only. No 32-bit support.

Claymore Monero Pool Nvidia Miner Is Zcash For Mac Download

Linux version also requires AMD APP SDK installed. Linux version has been tested in Cent 6.5 and Ubuntu 14.04. Miner has built-in GPU overclocking features and temperature management, also it supports remote monitoring/management.

Claymore Monero Pool Nvidia Miner Is Zcash For Mac

Set 'GPUMAXALLOCPERCENT' environment variable as '100'. For multi-GPU systems, set Virtual Memory size in Windows at least 16 GB: 'Computer Properties / Advanced System Settings / Performance / Advanced / Virtual Memory'. This miner is free-to-use, however, current developer fee is 2% if you use secure SSL/TLS connection to mining pool, miner mines 49 rounds for you and 1 round for developer.

If you use unsecure connection to mining pool, current developer fee is 2.5%, miner mines 39 rounds for you and 1 round for developer. If you don't agree with the dev fee - don't use this miner, or use '-nofee' option. Attempts to cheat and remove dev fee will cause a bit slower mining speed (same as '-nofee 1') though miner will show same hashrate. This version is for recent AMD videocards only: 7xxx and 2xx, also 6xxx and 5xxx. No nVidia support. This version is for Windows x64 only.

No 32-bit support. Linux version also requires AMD APP SDK installed. Linux version has been tested in Cent 6.5 and Ubuntu 14.04. Miner has built-in GPU overclocking features and temperature management, also it supports remote monitoring/management.

I've just started mining (0.8 XMR so far, woo!) with some NVidia cards (4x GTX750ti), mainly due to the low power draw. As far as I know, the only GPU miner for the cryptonight algorithm is. I know there are a couple of forks, such as but considering there are a few different options for AMD GPU mining, and CPU mining, I'm surprised there isn't at least one alternative. FWIW, I'm happy with ccminer, I just think it's good to be able to compare miners for efficiency and ease of use, etc.

Is there a reason for this or is it just that ccminer works well so why make another? This problem is a symptom of a larger issue, namely why any developer would give something away for free and maintain it through driver cycles when they could instead program their own version that is significantly better than the others and make a lot of money mining, or make a lot of money by selling their miner to a mining conglomerate who includes a clause in their contact that gives them exclusive use of the code.

People like Claymore, who codes one of the ATI mining software options, are few and far between, particularly for an altcoin like Monero. Coding mining software requires a great degree of technical skill, yet almost all of those who already have a free version but still want somewhat faster software are unwilling to pay for it. That mismatch is the crux of the problem.