I don't understand all this hate. From the beginning R-T-B was saying, this series of articles will run for a year and provide us with insight to the consumer mining world, of course biased on how HE sees it.
And in that regard I like this. R-T-B, as an IT enthusiast like most people on here are, has some interesting (albeit not necessarily useful) "gadgets" at home e.g. his NAS which is way too power hungry. In a german forum I also frequent there is a in comparison huge community of owners of HP Microservers. Also powerhungry and mostly only used as NAS devices.
Now R-T-B included his NAS into his mining rig. He shut down a device, that sucked 400W out the wall. He got rid of his "gadget NAS" that (and I'm assuming stuff here) he built completely overpowered and with too high of a power footprint with the intention of learning more about servers and maybe setting more stuff up on it, which never happened (again similar to this HP Microserver community I mentioned). So yes, hiw mining rig might consume 550W uselessly, but at the same time it replaced a 400W NAS and now has a "small" use (for R-T-B). Since I would now argue, that, since it was running reliably, R-T-B wouldn't have shut down the NAS in the course of this year anyways, he now used the opportunity and in comparison his mining rig is now "only" at 150W useless energy use compared to the status quo before R-T-B started his seeries of articles. At the same time, since his miner now runs on Linux, which in comparison to a Windows box is less propable to be attacked, he shut down another system that he heavily firewalled. BUT(!) this system was also only used for mining (in this case storing the wallet), so we can neglect the power saving here.
He then put a DLNA server on there and also gave us a nice tidbit about his UPS, which might be interesting to some people that for some reason use this UPS on a windows machine and want to switch to Linux.
I really hate mining, because it keeps me from gettingg a good and cheap GPU, even if used (I mostly buy used). Especially since my PC was stolen and I'm running on stuff that was donated to me by several friends. At least I can run my beloved Dota, barely.
But still, R-T-B himself stated, this series of articles is an experiment. So why hate on this?
Maybe it will give several more hardcore miners a good idea.
And now just imagine, if 100 miners have 400W servers/NAS running happily in their basement and transfer that into their mining rig now?
That'd be 40000W or 40kW saved in energy.
Every hour.
400kW in 10 hours.
Around 1MW a day.
It may be utopic, but as home-miners tend to be tech savy people the possibility of such servers existing in the hundreds is in my humble opinion relatively high.
Regards,
the German,
citizen of a country known for constantly seeing everything new and not inherent to our culture as negative and generally shit.