Monday, March 31, 2014

$46k Spent on Mining Hardware: Who Will Deliver the Goods?

(@dariodipardo) | Published on March 31, 2014 at 14:38 BST | Analysis, Cointerra, KnCMiner, Mining, Technology
Manufacturers of digital currency mining equipment have become notorious for their long delays in shipments and poor customer service. But is this general perception actually the case?
In this personal mining hardware roundup, Dario Di Pardo gives us his insight into the world of the frustrated miner, after personally dealing with a number of mining hardware makers over the last five months, and dealing with widely varying levels of delay, customer services and offers of compensation or refund.

Black Arrow

Prospero X3
Product: Prospero X-3 (2 TH/s)
Price including shipping: $4,978
Order date: November 18th, 2013
Anticipated shipping date: February 24th, 2014
Expected delay: 2-3 months
After ordering in November and expecting delivery in February, shipping has now been delayed till May 1st due to power consumption issues with Black Arrow’s 28nm ASIC chip.
To compensate for the delay, however, the company offered free cloud hashing power for six months – effectively worth 25% of the purchased hashing power.
Tape-out of the improved chip was completed on February 23rd, and no further issues that could endanger the new shipping date are foreseen.
Customer support has been somewhat slow, but still reasonable.

HashFast

Hashfast minerProduct: Sierra (1.2 TH/s)
Price including shipping: $6,696
Order date: November 18th, 2013
‘Guaranteed’ delivery date: February 15th, 2014
Expected delay: 2.5 months
In December, a production update was communicated via email. Unfortunately, it also contained the email addresses of all HashFast customers, thus compromising their privacy, as well as mine.
My initial order confirmation gave February 15th as the ‘guaranteed delivery date’ (deliveries after this date entitle buyers to a refund). In January, however, I received an email giving March 31st as the new ‘guaranteed delivery date’. The email came without any complementary information whatsoever.
I received a further email on 28th March concerning shipping updates. Basically in my case (Batch 3), I must accept another month of delay (May shipment) or I can ‘upgrade’ my order to the new Sierra EVO (2 TH/s).
The latter option would also mean later shipment (end of May) and because it will be a kit, I would have to buy my own power supplies.
Ironically enough, people who placed an order for the Sierra EVO (available as of 20th February) will seemingly get theirs before I do, in April, this is despite the fact that I ordered mine three months before them.
Bitcoin refund requests from early customers who paid their order in bitcoins were refused and offered refunds in fiat at USD hardware pricing at the time of purchase instead. According some displeased customers, who are now considering legal action against HashFast, the terms of service clearly stated that orders paid in bitcoins would be refunded with the same amount of bitcoins.
Facing a one-week backlog, their customer support strikes me as questionable: some emails are ignored, while others are answered with generic replies.
No compensation for the delivery delay has been offered at this time.

Virtual Mining Corporation (VMC)

VMC miner
Product: Fast-Hash One Platinum Edition (1 TH/s)
Price including shipping: $6,479
Order date: November 24th, 2013
Anticipated shipping date: January 2014
Delay: 8 months?
Production of VMC’s consumer mining machines is subject to a significant delay, due to underperformance of the 28nm ASIC chip manufactured by eASIC.
According Kenneth E. Slaughter, CEO of VMC, which is a subsidiary of Active Mining Corporation, customers who wish to cancel their pre-order will be refunded in full.
Strangely enough, this delay is not being communicated to the company’s customers, neither by email nor via the website. One can only discover this information by checking the forums.
Considering the delay and lack of communication, I decided to apply for a refund on January 10th.
The only refund method is by cheque, and I received mine about a month after my application. Unfortunately the cheque came with a misspelling in my name, so that cashing it in was impossible.
The cheque was sent back with an accompanying letter clearly stating the correct spelling of the recipient’s name, just to be sure.
However, mid-March a new cheque arrived containing the same misspelling and, this time, it wasn’t signed either. At this point I started to wonder whether these errors were being done on purpose to delay the refund.
Declining my request to have the funds wired to my bank account instead, VMC will now be sending a third cheque (after receiving the unsigned one back from me).
So, maybe with some luck, some four to five months after applying for a refund, I will actually get my money back.
Despite all this, their customer service team has pretty good response times to email inquiries.

Bitmine

Coincraft minerProduct: CoinCraft Desk (1 TH/s)
Price including shipping: $5,758
Order date: November 28th, 2013
Anticipated shipping date: February (week 1)
Expected delay: 2.5 to 3 months

After a three months’ delay, Bitmine began shipping their first CoinCraft Desk units on the 12th of February.
According to CEO Giorgio Massarotto, exactly one month thereafter, about 250 units were delivered, which would average out at a production capacity of 12 units a day.
Some customers have claimed the slow production rate is due to a deal Bitmine made with PETA-MINE, allowing them to cut in front of the delivery queue, causing extra delay for ordinary customers. This has not been confirmed, however.
In addition, Bitmine is currently experiencing a shortage of 1300W power supplies, which are needed for a fully populated (1 TH/s) CoinCraft Desk. Also a result of the PETA-MINE deal, according to some commenters.
Early recipients of the hardware have also reported that the Desk’s ‘turbo mode’ doesn’t work as advertised. For a 1 TH/s Desk ‘turbo mode’ would allow hash rates up to 1.5 TH/s. In reality it doesn’t even come close to that number, they said.
Those who have ordered a CoinCraft Rig unit will have to cope with yet more delay, in the sense that shipment of these units has yet to be started. A recently published news update on the company website says this is expected in early April.
To compensate for the delay, Bitmine has a customer protection plan in place, which the company says consists of the following:
1) Shipment can be late up to a maximum of 10 days from the agreed shipment date.
2) For each subsequent 10 days of late shipping, we will add for free 10% more hashing power to your order as penalty.
3) After the 61st day of late shipment, you have the right to request a full refund and we will pay you an additional penalty of 10% of the initial order amount.
However, Bitmine recently announced on its official forum (just before it was closed down for about a week due to personal insults towards the CEO) that the maximum bonus hashing power was limited to 50% – a fact not mentioned in their customer protection plan.
This fact, in addition to the PETA-MINE story and the CoinCraft Desk’s ‘turbo mode’ issues, has led to many upset customers.
From the end of February till mid-March emails were answered with a delay of one to two weeks. During this period it was also very difficult to get a support representative on the phone.
Bitmine has worked through its support tickets backlog, however, and you can now expect a response time of about one day.
So far, Bitmine has been unable to provide an estimated shipment date for my order.

KnCMiner

KNCminer
Product: Neptune (3 TH/s)
Price including shipping: $10,175
Pre-order date: January 7th, 2014
Anticipated shipping date: Q2 2014
Expected delay: None
Having taped out their 20nm ASIC chip in February, KnCMiner seems on track for the Q2 delivery of the 3 TH/s SHA-256 mining rig.
In case a delay should occur, KnCMiner has said it will compensate customers with a free hosted hashing package as part of its so-called ‘Plan B’.

Alpha Technology

Alpha Viper minerProduct: Viper (Scrypt) Miner (90 MH/s)
Price excluding shipping: £5,450 ($8,984)
Pre-order date: January 10th, 2014
Anticipated shipping date: July 2014
Expected delay: None
Shortly after the KnCMiner 100 MH/s scrypt miner announcement on March 3rd, Alpha Technology struck back with updated specifications for both of its upcoming miners.
The hash rate of the 5 MH/s scrypt miner has increased to 16 MH/s, while the 25 MH/s rig will be mining at 90 MH/s. Prices have not increased as a result.
Regular development updates contribute to a good customer experience so far.

CoinTerra

CoinTerra miner
Product: TerraMiner IV (2 TH/s)
Price including shipping: $6,569
Order date: January 12th, 2014
Anticipated shipping date: May 2014
Expected delay: None
CoinTerra’s January and February batches were shipped out with a delay of about a month.
Because hardware specifications have been lower than anticipated – with a hash rate up to 1.72 TH/s instead of the advertised 2 TH/s and a 20% power draw increase – early customers were offered a 15% discount coupon redeemable against their next CoinTerra hardware purchase.
Seemingly now on track for delivery of later batches, they are working on improving the miner’s performance and power efficiency to meet its initial specifications.

This $200 Raspberry Pi Box Could Have Saved Mt. Gox



The innards of the PiperWallet, powered by Rasberry Pi. Photo: Ariel Zambelich/WIRED
The innards of the PiperWallet, powered by Raspberry Pi. Photo: Ariel Zambelich/WIRED
The PiperWallet is a small black box that does little more than generate numbers and spit out paper. But if you invest in bitcoin — the popular digital currency — it could be a lifesaver.
When you own bitcoins, they’re stored at a particular address on the internet, and if you want to spend them or move them, you’ll need a cryptographic private key associated with that address. Many people store their keys in “wallets” that sit on their personal computer or on a website somewhere. Some companies, such as Coinbase or Blockchain, now offer free online wallets that are pretty convenient. But those who hold a large number of bitcoins don’t like to use conventional wallet services. They’re worried these services will be hacked.
Based on the popular Raspberry Pi hardware kit, this $200 device makes bitcoin wallets out of paper. That way, no one can hack them.
In fact, it’s good to be a little paranoid when it comes to storing bitcoins. There’s a lot of malicious software out there that sniffs around on computers for ways to steal the digital currency. That’s why PiperWallet takes a different tack. Based on the popular Raspberry Pi hardware kit, this $200 device makes bitcoin wallets out of paper. That way, no one can hack them.
In the online world, stealing bitcoins is pretty darned simple. Just ask Bloomberg TV’s Adam Johnson. A few months back he quickly had $20 worth of bitcoin stolen when he briefly flashed a private key on television. It’s one of the big security problems with bitcoin — the internet’s version of cash. If someone steals your coins, they’re gone forever.
So, when they own serious amounts of bitcoin, investors go to some pretty extreme lengths to protect their private keys. Charlie Shrem, the now-indicted CEO of the Bitinstant bitcoin exchange, saves his on a ring that he wears on his finger. Others generate their private keys on brand new computers that they never connect to the internet. PiperWallet wants to help anyone store their keys in a similarly secure way — but with dead trees as the medium.

An example of a PiperWallet paper bitcoin wallet. Photo: Ariel Zambelich/WIRED
An example of a PiperWallet paper bitcoin wallet. Photo: Ariel Zambelich/WIRED
That tactic could have helped Mt. Gox, the first major bitcoin exchange, which kept its bitcoins in what’s known as a “cold wallet”. That means that Gox’s private key was supposedly stored in a way that it couldn’t be accessed by hackers, or by any systems connected to the internet. Except that many of Gox’s bitcoins “vanished” — somehow — and Gox was forced to declare bankruptcy, a mess that looks like it will take years to sort out.
Nobody but CEO Mark Karpelles seems to know what happened to Gox, but there may be a lesson here. If the company had simply used a secure paper wallet, perhaps it would still have its bitcoins. That goes double for Gox customers who had stored their bitcoins with the troubled exchange rather than on their own. “If people had stored their coins in PiperWallet, then they wouldn’t have lost them on Mt. Gox,” says PiperWallet’s creator, Chris Cassano.
He has sold about 300 of his PiperWallets to date, mostly to paranoid bitcoin types, or to bitcoin ATM operators who want to give customers a quick and easy way to print out a secure bitcoin wallet. The device is easy to use. You plug it in, push a button, and out comes your wallet complete with digital keys and phone-scannable QR codes. You can print a wallet, use your phone fund it with bitcoins, and then hand it over to a friend or family member or just like cash. It’s the perfect gift for your favorite Bloomberg TV reporter.

Saturday, March 29, 2014

11 Top Bitcoin Memes

(@roopgill) | Published on March 29, 2014 at 11:56 GMT | Lifestyle
Bitcoin and viral memes are two of the greatest gifts of the Internet.
Hence, it makes perfect sense to pay tribute to both in a rundown of the best bitcoin memes making the rounds on cyberspace.

1. Let’s establish who the bitcoin owners are:
Bitcoin owners meme


However, thanks to a little something called ‘anonymity’, we’ll never really know exactly who owns what, although some have tried.

2. They took the blue pill:
Matrix bitcoin meme


While it may take Neo some time to get ready, you can already buy lots with your bitcoins.

3. Bitcoin is going to be explosive:
Bitcoin meme Breaking Bad


But could it be worth more than an ounce of gold?

4. You can go places with bitcoin:
bitcoin moon


The Caribbean, Mount Everest, the Moon … oh the places you’ll go!

5. But not everyone loves bitcoin:
Queen meme bitcoin


In fact some people really hate it. Like this guy. And this one too.

6. What we are all wondering:
Dogecoin meme


It might be these guys in Asia.

7. This could be their strategy:
Bitcoin meme Wolf of Wall Street


All hail Queen B? These contenders are catching up. Some did really well last year.

8. There were definitely some winners in bitcoin:
Bitcoin meme


If you want to know exactly what happened with the value of bitcoin, then make sure you read this.

9. And then there was Chuck Norris:
Chuck Norris bitcoin meme


But sadly, lots of other people were not able to do so.

10. Rejoice! The chosen one has been found:
grumpy nakamoto


Maybe not. But, this is what Newsweek speculated.

11. Just in case the man didn’t make himself clear enough:
Satoshi Nakamoto meme


Because one does not simply find Satoshi Nakamoto.