OK, understood. Then tell me, please, how do you think, Satoshi, when on his own computer he extracted blocks during the first months, he did not sit and did not manually start (did not write manually) each time a new address to receive the award.
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Ohh... I think now I get your question. At least part of it. All of the early block rewards are sent towards different addresses, hence you wondering about address generation.
As mentioned by fronti, early Bitcoin Core wallet versions were non-deterministic, so each private key was generated at random. Now I'm not sure about Satoshi's original implementation, but later non-deterministic wallet versions of Bitcoin Core generated a collection of random private keys (and the corresponding BTC addresses) in advance and stored them in the wallet.dat file (assuming you still use the non-deterministic Bitcoin Core wallet they still do, obviously). If I recall correctly it's 100 BTC addresses that get generated and stored in advance. Assuming Satoshi's original client behaved in a similar fashion, the original CPU miner would have chosen one address after another of this pool of pre-generated addresses until it ran out, at which point it would generate more random addresses to which to receive coins to.
Is this what you were wondering about?
Yes, that's what I think about a lot.
And I do not give rest I do not connect logic. Firstly - there are a lot of addresses (we take 22k addresses). Secondly - with some addresses were translations, then the keys were somewhere recorded.
Thirdly, if I were to do a test of my product with such a potential (and I knew about the potential of Satoshi, because this was the motive for his work), I would not do it for anything in life - as Satoshi wrote: ("These bitcoins are always lost for everyone, so that the rest of the cost is more expensive, because without these coins there is more deficit of coins "), there is little that happens in life, so it is worth understanding that, most likely, say" just in case ", there is a logical justification for in fact, a process has been made (as you said) to create a pool of addresses (for example, several
But all this is not logical. I would be helped by the understanding of the first, second, third miner released from Satoshi. I understand that Bitcoin Core version 1 had a function to extract blocks?
I can not find it, do you have it?
I also think that Satoshi, had some other goal, mining blocks alone for almost a year than just testing, do you agree?
If you do not consider the "premin" as the fork makers do now,
and not to think about "long long testing", that is, something else.