I have been wanting to add my humble hashrate contribution to the network for a while now.
I wanted to first get a dedicated machine, with at least 200GB for the full and blockchain, running 24x7, with all the bells and whistles…
So I kept pushing it off, further and further. “I don’t have the hardware”, “I don’t have 200GB”, “I don’t have a monero node for maximum privacy”…

Today I realised that I should at least try it a bit. Just a tiny bit and see how it goes.

Thank you @XMRbutterfly for your post

I went to the gupax website just to see what it looks like, there is a short video explaining the process.
Downloaded, added a monero address, clicked start. BOOM! I am already running a monero miner on p2pool mini!

It was actually surprisingly fast and easy. None of the roadblocks I imagined were actually real.
I don’t have to run it on a separate dedicated machine (I can always do that later), I don’t have to allocate 200GB for it (I am using a remote node for now, so 0GB for that), I don’t have to run my own node first (this setup is already a good start).

Why didn’t I try this earlier? I don’t know, don’t ask me =D

In any case, just so you know, you can try it right now in just a few minutes, and even if you stop mining after a while, that’s perfectly fine too.

  • HardenedSteel@monero.town
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    3 days ago

    Your calculations are wrong. You can get around 3 kH/s with 1/3 of a “regular CPU”

    High end CPUs can get like 20kH/s with full usage.

    • hetzlemmingsworld@lemmings.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      edit-2
      3 days ago

      I think that you are wrong. My source is https://xmrig.com/benchmark/ Go somewhere to the middle of the page (to get rough middle performance CPU). For example I can see: 984 Intel® Core™ i5-10500T CPU @ 2.30GHz (6 threads CPU). I click it and mean hashrate is 1839. Divide that by 3, you have 613 hashes.