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Whatsminer M50s 126T mining SHA-256 at 126TH/s low 3276W.<br><br>AVAILABLE NOW<br><br>Shipment 2 weeks after payment<br><br>Specifications<br>ManufacturertMicroBT<br>ModeltWhatsminer M50S

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whatsminer (1)

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  1. Whatsminer M50S.New Bitcoin Mining Machine MicroBT Whatsminer M50S. Bitcoin mining is the process of putting new bitcoins into circulation. It is also how the network confirms new transactions and is a critical part in the maintenance and development of the blockchain ledger. The "mining" is done using advanced hardware that solves an extremely complex mathematical arithmetic problem. The first computer to find the solution to the problem receives the next block of bitcoins and the process starts all over again. Cryptocurrency mining is cautious, expensive, and only sporadically rewarding. However, mining has a magnetic attraction for many investors interested in cryptocurrencies because miners are rewarded for their work with cryptocurrencies. This may be because enterprising types see mining as a godsend, like the gold diggers in California in 1849. And if you're technologically inclined, why not go for it?

  2. The Bitcoin reward that miners receive is an incentive that motivates people to help with the main purpose of mining: to legitimize and verify Bitcoin transactions and ensure their validity. Because many users around the world share in this responsibility, Bitcoin is a "decentralized" cryptocurrency, or a cryptocurrency that does not rely on a central authority, such as a central bank or government, to monitor its regulations. What do you need to mine bitcoins? While people could compete for blocks with a regular home computer early in Bitcoin's history, this is no longer the case. The reason for this is that the difficulty of mining Bitcoin changes over time. To ensure that the blockchain runs smoothly and can process and verify transactions, the Bitcoin network aims to produce a block every 10 minutes. But if there are 1 million mining rigs competing to solve the hash problem, they are likely to come up with a solution faster than in a scenario where 10 mining rigs are working on the same problem. For this reason, Bitcoin is designed to assess and adjust mining difficulty every 2,016 blocks or roughly every two weeks.1 When there is more computing power working together to mine bitcoins, the difficulty of mining increases to keep the production of blocks at a constant rate. Less computing power means the difficulty decreases. With the current size of the network, a personal computer mining bitcoins will almost certainly find nothing. My hardware All of this means that in order to compete competitively, miners must now invest in powerful computing devices, such as a graphics processing unit (GPU) or, more realistically, an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC). These can range from $500 to tens of thousands of dollars. Some miners, especially Ethereum miners, buy separate graphics cards as a cheap way to merge mines. Today, Bitcoin mining hardware consists almost exclusively of ASIC machines, which in this case specifically do one thing and one thing only: mine bitcoins. Today's ASICs are many orders of magnitude more powerful than CPUs or GPUs, gaining hashing power and energy efficiency every few months as new chips are developed and deployed. Today's miners can produce close to 200 TH/s at just 27.5 joules per teraash.

  3. MicroBT has announced its latest generation of bitcoin miners, the M50 series, which includes the M50, M50s and M53. MicroBT COO Jordan Chan said in a recorded message during the Bitcoin 2022 conference that the new miners are now ready to ship. The new WhatsMiner M50S can produce up to 126 terahashes per second (TH/s) with an efficiency of 26 joules per terahash (Y/T), and the WhatsMiner M50 can produce 114 TH/s at 29 J/T, according to the presentation of the company. The news series machines will have a 5nm Samsung processor and a single silo design and will be backwards compatible, according to the announcement.The company also announced a water-cooled platform, the M53, which is still under development and can reach 226 TH/s at 29 J/T. According to the company's presentation, the machine operates with ultra-low noise, +95% heat recovery rate and lower error rate. “Our solutions can provide our customers with carbon neutrality,” Chan said of the M53. "We can reuse the heat from the water cooler to help improve greenhouses, homes, fish farms, hospitals, etc." For more information visit WhatsMiner website: https://microbt.tech/product/microbt-whatsminer-m50s/ Contact Us support@microbt.tech

  4. 801, Hangsheng Technology Building, gaoxin South 6th Road, Nanshan District, Shenzhen

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