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Hosted by C. Edward Kelso, Inside Mining examines the exciting world of securing blockchains, consensus, data centers, cloud hashing, manufacturing, and pools. Inside Mining is ad-free thanks to BitDeer, the world's leading computing power-sharing platform. Head to bitdeer.com to access a full range of cloud hashing solutions to help alleviate the normally complicated process of procuring mining equipment and transport, power management, and mining farm maintenance … with just one click.
- 5 - China's Loss is Ukraine's and Laos' Gain | INSIDE MINING
Host C. Edward Kelso insists the vacuum left by China's mining ban is being filled by the likes of Ukraine and Laos, two countries with relatively young populations, desperate economies, and surpluses of cheap, clean energy. Special thanks to our sponsor Bitdeer-Mine-Miner|Bitcoin_Crypto Currency|Cloud Mining Platform for keeping us ad-free.
Thu, 16 Sep 2021 - 07min - 4 - Kid Miners The Thakurs of Texas | INSIDE MINING
Kid miners, the Thakurs of Dallas, Texas, are making upwards of $30,000 a month mining ethereum. They started in their home garage and grew the project into a viable business. The story is very inspiring. INSIDE MINING is ad-free thanks to Bitdeer-Mine-Miner|Bitcoin_Crypto Currency|Cloud Mining Platform
Wed, 01 Sep 2021 - 09min - 3 - Environmental Arguments Every Miner Needs | INSIDE MINING
Hass McCook joins host C. Edward Kelso to discuss McCook's fantastic article, BITCOIN’S ENERGY USE COMPARED TO OTHER MAJOR INDUSTRIES.
McCook examines energy-intense industries, from construction to transportation, and even healthcare and finance, comparing their usage to that of Bitcoin.
It's a novel approach at countering the Bitcoin-is-bad-for-the-environment crowd. Miners who're already convinced Bitcoin is no such threat still must have a familiarity with the arguments, the facts, and how to present the topic to regulators, legislators, and local officials.
McCook is a solid analyst, and his article will be a go-to reference for all miners.
This podcast is ad-free thanks to www.bitdeer.com.
Sat, 14 Aug 2021 - 29min - 2 - The Great May 2021 China Ban and Its Implications | INSIDE MINING
Thanks to www.bitdeer.com.
Host C. Edward Kelso
China's been a large part of the Bitcoin money ecosystem for quite some time now: ASICs are manufactured there, data centers, pools. For years, China had 2/3rds of the world’s hash rate.
Last time China cracked down was in 2017, responding to the ICO craze. Exchanges were crushed, and miners lived in a grey area for years after.
By March of this year, the government went after miners in Inner Mongolia. Some thought maybe the crackdown was over environmental concerns and so it would be confined. The end of May cleared it all up, of course.
Even some of the miners in China were skeptical of the ban’s comprehensivity. For years, they’d work with local officials to gather permits and pay fees. But to no avail: facilities were padlocked, machines blocked, etcetera.
Provinces across the country were impacted, including Sichuan, which was thought to be possibly spared due to its reliance on renewable hydro power. But those miners were closed as well. Hash rate soon fell, obviously, as a result.
Something like 50% of the Bitcoin network was essentially shut off.
Hash rate falling made it easier for more smaller miners to climb aboard, so that’s a positive outcome.
But it does boggle the mind to think of how many mining rigs sit idle in China now.
Some optimists are holding to the hope China might eventually ease restrictions and eventually allow some mining to continue. At present no signs point in that direction.
The country is on something of an environmental kick. Cryptos like Bitcoin tend to undermine a great worry for the government, which is capital flight. And of course they’re constantly floating their own central bank digital currency, the digital yuan. Again, it doesn’t look good for miners in China.
And then consider all the previous investment that went into those many facilities in China. All of that was confiscated in a wink, in no time. Do you really believe miners are going to want to go through that kind of capricious uncertainty again?
What’s interesting is the impact China’s ban is having. Places like Texas and Kazakhstan are benefitting from miners on the prowl for capacity.
Obviously, Central Asia has a geographical advantage over the US, and it’s a lot easier to get back up and running -- the United States and Canada are plagued by regulation and permits.
Latin America might be a fit, but those tend to be typically hotter climates as a rule which complicates the cost of data center set ups. Not impossible, of course, but maybe not as cheap as previously thought.
But, what that could do, with Latin America being more receptive to the mining industry, is push manufactures to innovate around internal rig cooling systems. So who knows.
It does appear, however, mining rig machine manufacturing can thrive still in China. There’s a lot of experience in China when it comes to machines. And the relative cheap labor, parts, and assembly costs can make China attractive at least on that level. But, again, for how long? What if the government cracks down further?
And maybe there is a final hope for North America gaining in this scenario, actually. More regulatory clarity, more relative transparency in the rules of the road, more publicly traded mining companies, means miners won’t have to worry about being banned suddenly out of nowhere. So, at least for larger mining concerns, North America can be very attractive.
Fri, 06 Aug 2021 - 13min - 1 - Inside Mining Minute: Teen Miner Makes $54,000 a Year | INSIDE MINING
I am C. Edward Kelso, and this is your inside mining minute. CNBC profiled Nick Sears. He was 17 years old when he helped build a mining farm in Dallesport, Washington. Two years later, and the kid now oversees a hydro-powered data center with 4,500 ASICs. Sears actually lives on campus in a sound-locked room so that he doesn’t hear the machines when he closes his door. “I don’t think about going to college at all,” he told CNBC, “just pursuing further knowledge in the repairs of the miners.” He credits his mining rig repair knowledge to online training courses run by Chinese engineers. The farm is directly adjacent to a nearby Dam, a source of power Sears says is “cheap, renewable, and very abundant.” He makes $54,000 a year, plus full health insurance, which is paid for by the company -- not bad for a teenager. As always, the Inside Mining Minute is brought to you by your friends atbitdeer.com.
Thu, 05 Aug 2021 - 00min
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