FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2008
- Messages
- 26,259 (4.46/day)
- Location
- IA, USA
System Name | BY-2021 |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 5800X (65w eco profile) |
Motherboard | MSI B550 Gaming Plus |
Cooling | Scythe Mugen (rev 5) |
Memory | 2 x Kingston HyperX DDR4-3200 32 GiB |
Video Card(s) | AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT |
Storage | Samsung 980 Pro, Seagate Exos X20 TB 7200 RPM |
Display(s) | Nixeus NX-EDG274K (3840x2160@144 DP) + Samsung SyncMaster 906BW (1440x900@60 HDMI-DVI) |
Case | Coolermaster HAF 932 w/ USB 3.0 5.25" bay + USB 3.2 (A+C) 3.5" bay |
Audio Device(s) | Realtek ALC1150, Micca OriGen+ |
Power Supply | Enermax Platimax 850w |
Mouse | Nixeus REVEL-X |
Keyboard | Tesoro Excalibur |
Software | Windows 10 Home 64-bit |
Benchmark Scores | Faster than the tortoise; slower than the hare. |
You're forgetting the surge is followed by a slump. Once the latest cryptocurrency flavor of the week gets too saturated to be profitable, a lot of those used cards flood the market and the GPU manufacturers and retailers get stuck with huge inventories of used cards and new cards they can't move. That's *really* bad for them. Steady growth is best.Oh and to correct the title of this thread. Mining is driving up prices on it's own. DEMAND IS DRIVING UP PRICES. The more cards sold and being used is really a good thing in my belief. It will force advancement in GPU even further than what we already have which is awesome.
Infrastructure is only improved if it is inadequate or breaks. It's not like someone buys a new computer and suddenly we got to replace all the wires between it and the power source.Do you really need proof that energy infrastructure will be improved if demand is there to improve it? They are selling a product.
In terms of the power source, it likely means power plants are running hotter to keep up with demand. And not just in power systems but also environmental cooling. I didn't even take that into consideration with my previous math (and it's significant).
Cryptocurrencies have near-zero value unless it is considered legal tender. Big investors won't touch it unless it is legal tender. If Etherium, by itself, is not considered legal tender in big economies (e.g. USA, EU, China), then to get any validity, it has to trade through a legal tender like Bitcoin. Bitcoin is and will remain king until something else gets *more* "official endorsements" than it.Don't be so sure of that. Ethereum is the one set to overtake bitcoins market cap in"the Flippening" soon. Official endorsement means nothing in crypto-land.
The only reason why it hasn't been heavily taxed in the USA is because Washington, D.C. is in such massive disarray. Countries like Russia are moving much faster towards taxation. It's really a matter of "when."I massively disagree about "likely" but it is likely to get more regulated as time goes on, yes. Taxing the "hell out of it?" No. No one wants to kill this at this point, save for people upset they can't get graphics cards.
For the record, I'm not currently in the market for a graphics card and I won't be for quite some time.
Currencies (especially USD) has means to be traced. Criminals have to *work* to scrub their dirty money which gives law enforcement time to catch them in the act. Whenever a marked, stolen dollar returns to a reserve, they know where that dollar was last in circulation.The only point you might have is it's "wastefulness of it physical resources" (personally, I think running a payment network is not wasteful, and really question whether it is that much more taxing vs what we did with these in the first place), the others are universal criminal activities that occur on all currencies, and are decidedly in the minority, especially since the shutdown of the silk road.
You really don't think a bunch of services similar to Silk Road haven't popped up in their stead? Let's not forget the Silk Road was likely traced by the FBI using USD exchanges. Cryptocurrencies make it much more difficult to find sources and destinations of transactions.
Not really. Supercomputers have immense power so they can solve problems fast. Why? To move on to the next problem. In order for a supercomputer to be valuable, it has to be flexible, not one-trick ponies. Nothing *good* comes out of cryptocurrencies. I've not seen any significant evidence to contradict that.That's a point as well. If they made a really awesome compute-only card as a result of this at a mainstreamist price point, well, supercomputers and miners everywhere would benefit.
I have yet to meet a person that thinks "the space race is a massive waste of resources." The public support of the Apollo program evidences this. Hell, even for how much Bush and Obama got attacked for a lot of things, there was never really much backlash over them prioritizing a Mars mission for NASA. The collective response was more down the lines of "finally!"People think the space race is a "massive waste of resources" as well. People in general are short-sighted. There are genuine returns from both these things that just because they cannot see them, they assume aren't there.
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