Search content
Sort by

Showing 10 of 10 results by Jello
Post
Topic
Board Services
Re: Want to buy something from Japan? Maybe I can help you!
by
Jello
on 20/10/2012, 22:27:53 UTC
Hey maptor,

I was wondering if you've ever come across Riska corn potage or meiji Chelsea espresso mix. I've found them in the Kyoto region, if that helps.
http://i45.tinypic.com/2hic7wi.jpg and http://i46.tinypic.com/i4k58o.jpg

Thanks!
Post
Topic
Board Computer hardware
Re: [WTS] Damaged ASUS P8H77-V
by
Jello
on 30/06/2012, 04:27:22 UTC
It's kinda important to mention WHICH pins are bent. Are they among the 1155 processor pins?
A picture would also be very helpful, as perhaps it is possible to bend it back.
Post
Topic
Board Mining
Re: Run my program in your Nvidia GPU (for bitcoins)
by
Jello
on 17/06/2012, 21:34:14 UTC
I have a card with 96 CUDA cores on an 2nd gen Sandy Bridge on CentOS. Not sure if that's enough for your needs.
Post
Topic
Board Mining
Re: I think I plugged my mining farm to the wrong house!!!
by
Jello
on 22/03/2012, 10:58:17 UTC
So all you have to do is use 2 MW 24/7 for one billing cycle (without tripping the fuses, mind you), and you could get away with free electricity? Sounds like a plan!
Post
Topic
Board CPU/GPU Bitcoin mining hardware
Re: Intel HD Graphics
by
Jello
on 22/03/2012, 10:46:58 UTC
Rumor has it that the upcoming Ivy Bridge IGP will support OpenCL.
"The Ivy Bridge GPU adds support for OpenCL 1.1, DirectX 11 and OpenGL 3.1"
See http://www.anandtech.com/show/4830/intels-ivy-bridge-architecture-exposed/5 for more details.

As for why it's so difficult to mine on IGPs, it's because they weren't designed to compute. AMD and Nvidia specifically gave the hardware computational abilities. That's why you cannot mine with an old ATI 3870 or Geforce 7900GTX. They came out before APP and CUDA.
Post
Topic
Board Beginners & Help
Re: NVIDIA Tesla M2075 Fermi GPU Cards HASH RATE
by
Jello
on 22/03/2012, 10:23:37 UTC
750 MHash/s would be far too high. No single GPU could achieve that, much less a (Fermi-based) Nvidia.
The M2075 appears to be closest to the GTX470 (since they likely share the same GF100 chip and have 448 CUDA cores). Thus, a good estimate would be 80-120 MHash/s, depending on core and shader clock speed.
There's actually a M2050 in the comparison chart (listed as 80 MHash/s). The M2075 also appears to be the same as the M2050, but with more RAM. See http://www.nvidia.com/docs/IO/105880/DS-Tesla-M-Class-Aug11.pdf
Post
Topic
Board Beginners & Help
Re: arsbitcoin.com is scam!!
by
Jello
on 22/03/2012, 10:08:51 UTC
In case you haven't been following, manual cashouts (as well as changing settings in general) do work now. I just did it.
Like Marked cited, it was because someone was maliciously logging in and changing the payment addresses in people's accounts, so the pool operator (BurningToad) temporarily disabled everything. It works now, so I suggest you edit your original post so that you don't mislead others.
Post
Topic
Board Archival
Re: Using a virtual machine to make BTC transactions
by
Jello
on 22/03/2012, 09:55:21 UTC
If your (main OS) gets compromised, wouldn't the hacker still have access to your wallet?
Post
Topic
Board Beginners & Help
Re: Why ABCPool is now showing in Block Chain
by
Jello
on 22/03/2012, 09:50:29 UTC
They are? Do you have a link?
Post
Topic
Board Beginners & Help
Re: GPU Mining on stock/onboard. Also NVidia FX3000
by
Jello
on 03/02/2012, 06:49:16 UTC
It seems pretty unlikely that you'll be able to mine using an integrated graphics card (at least in the short term). The major video card manufacturers tout their CUDA/OpenCL technology as features, so they wouldn't want to let everyone use it (especially Nvidia's CUDA).
As for the Quadro FX 3000, it cannot use CUDA because CUDA was first implemented on the G8x cores (think Geforce 8000 series), while your graphics card has a NV35GL core (equivalent to a Geforce 6000 series). Thus, your card is not CUDA-compatible. OpenCL came to Nvidia after CUDA, so there's no hope there either. Sorry about that.
You could try to get a very cheap, used Radeon 5770/6770 (it's the same card) and crunch out 200 Mhash/s. They're also good for moderate gaming, if you're into that.