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My rig is 5700xt Where can I manually tune for build-in phoenix miner of NiceHash example bat file PhoenixMiner.exe -pool us.etc.wattpool.net:8008 -wal YOURETHADDRESS -worker WORKERNAME -epsw x -amd -acm -mi 1 -gt 126 -mode 1 -clKernel 1 -clNew 1 -clf 0 -lidag 1 -openclLocalWork 64 (or 32 for default, or 128 for the 60+ mh/s number) -openclGlobalMultiplier 4096 pause or Maybe can I still use phoenix miner without openning NiceHash but collect my BTC from this to same BTC address of my NiceHash ?
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Hi! I recently got into mining with NiceHash, using my 3060 Ti. I hate seeing that 100% load on my GPU, because I know it lessens the performance of the GPU over time. I know it will lower my mining rates, but I'm willing to do that if it means my GPU will stay at it's original glory for longer. Is there any way to lower the GPU load to around %50-%60 while mining? Thanks for any help!
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I have downloaded the installer after whitelisting the file in my mcafee virus protection software but when I try and run the installer, it says 'This file does not have an app associated with it for performing this action. Please install an app or, if one is already installed, create an association in the default apps settings page. Anyone know how to solve this?
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Hello guys! I am recently new to bitcoin and mining. So I started to mine with NiceHash. My question is what is the best way for me to convert my bitcoin into real money with smallest amount of fees. I want to transfer it and to stay in my bank account, but I read that first I need to send it to coinbase and then transfer it to my credit card. But i have a little problem and cant register to coinbase because it wants me a bill with my name , adress and so on. I provided them 3 different types of bills and still cant register. I will be grateful if someone can help me and explain to me how it works. Thank you!
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hii, can i mine 4 RTX 2060 with a 750psu? my specs : i5 9600k 16gb ddr4 vengeance pro rgb z390 aorus elite 1 ssd 2 hdd 5k rpm 1 hdd 7k rpm in nicehash my 2060 only uses 85watt each gpu if there's 4, they would be 340w for the gpu but can my rm750 gold handle it? or should i go a bigger watt psu?
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Let me start off by saying: this post *and hopefully subsequent replies from people that know what they're doing* is meant for the people that decided to try mining (or are about to) and don't know where to start research-wise. If anyone has any suggestions on how I should purge my system after hearing my tale, please leave some feedback below. Thanks! Before you even consider reading the rest of this post if you're halfway serious about beginning your journey into mining, create a system restore point now. This will be an invaluable step to giving you peace of mind later. You'll also avoid my mistake. Story time, it's a long one. I once saw a video from a certain Media Group that promoted being able to mine using a piece of software called NiceHash. I'd always wanted to get into mining crypto, I just built a sweet new personal gaming PC with modern parts, and since I had just opened up a coinbase account, I figured I had a place to put those coins and now was a good time (for the old dogs that just cringed reading that, this journey of a thread will hurt) I wanted to get this thing up as quickly as possible, so the NiceHashQuickMiner was the best way to go. Followed the link in the video description, created an account, watched a setup video, and away I went. AntiVirus? Nah, we'll shut it up and download it anyway, people are saying we're good. Let the auto-overclock do it's thing and ran the miner in the background when I slept, turned it off during my work/stream hours and kept that up for a few days. This went on for about 4 days. I was curious what the payout was like and decided to do a little digging. Turns out, even with my 3070, I was scheduled to only make about $7/week. That sounded WAY lower than what my skyrocketed expectations and youtube hype-men's words had flowered, so I decided to dig deeper. I found a few videos talking about some beef between NiceHash and some other mining software and scoffed at it at the time, thinking "lol, guess it's a crazy world out there. Some people must really just want profits." I know, I hate me too. Turns out, yes, you can get paid more mining on your own (in my case, about 5x). You see, you aren't mining in the traditional sense. Instead of trying to mine for a block the old fashioned way, you're essentially renting your PCs hardware out to NiceHash. They behave as a brokerage service so that people with cryptocurrency will pay them with said currency to use YOUR computer (and everyone else's that is using that application) to mine crypto for the top buyer, and you're getting a service fee from that transaction. If I've learned one thing about brokerages from playing the stock market since the beginning of quarantine, it's that the only people that truly profit off of these transactions are everyone but the workers. So I decided I wanted to leave NiceHash behind for now. I wouldn't get rid of it entirely, especially since I still had unpaid funds left sitting in the account that hadn't yet reached the payout balance. Instead, I'd start looking into how I could quickly and easily get some mining software to start up to mine Ethereum Classic, the little brother to the new darling of the crypto mining world. I did a quick google search and, wouldn't you know it, all of the suggestions started pouring in. Sites in Russian, domains that end in .xxx, maybe a blog post or two from some random news places I had NEVER heard of in my life, you name it. I decided I wanted to go the easy route, something that just had a GUI and a "Mine" button that would magically do all the tinkering for me, and found out that there is a mining application built right into the Microsoft Store on Windows! What luck, Microsoft approved a mining app, this has to be safe and secure, it even has a discord. No virus popup either! You might notice I'm not dropping the name, yea, that's because after I installed it, it didn't work. I put the settings in I needed to, pointed to a pool address (just googled what that was 5 minutes beforehand, but at least I made sure to choose the ssl protocol), gave it my address and hit go. Not a thing. I joined the discord for help and, as I later figured out, this application was made back in 2017, never updated, and the discord was a ghost town with no mods answering any questions and messages still coming in, but DAYS in between them. I decided this may be a bit too sketch for my taste and that I should do a little more research, maybe taking the year into account. Uninstalled, ran a virus scan. After that bust, I decided to try downloading a couple flavours of miners just to test the waters. After looking into some other sketchy blog-like websites that touted "THE BEST ETH AND ETC MINERS OF 2021", I decided to try BFGminer and ETHminer. I learned my lesson (kinda) about making sure the source was the right one. BFGminer's website looked kinda sketch, but after seeing SEVERAL (as in 5) reddit/blog posts saying the site and miner was legit, I gave it a download, extracted it (while AV was disabled, re-enabled after extraction) and started looking at the files. ETHminer, I found the official github page (thank god) and got the version that worked with my hardware, but saved extracting it for it BFG didn't work out. I didn't know what I need to click to make anything run, I tried going through the readme, didn't see anything immediately helpful, so I just clicked on the exe. Nothing happened. Didn't even see and command prompt window open. Took a few looks at it and said "okay, no GUI is opening, not liking this. Let's move to the other one." Tried running it in admin mode *note: DON'T DO THIS* Thought I might've accidentally opened an instance running in the background and then realized "oh crap, it might be running but I didn't run it right so I can't see it. Might as well full shutdown to clear it out, then try to configure it." All the while, Kaspersky was freaking out saying "hey, this isn't a virus since you said you wanted it, but criminals use this thing. You know that, right?" I was getting frustrated not knowing what to do with these files I just downloaded and executed on my computer, so I said screw it. I decided I wanted to use nanopool, and it turns out they have a miner that they have ready to mine on the pool, just put your address, rig name and email in and you're good to start! Got it from their official github page, filled in the blanks, click run and... AV blocks the execution of it. No problem, just run it in admin mode. After that, no problems popping up. It's running over SSL so no MITM crap or redirects, I'm not running the card very hard, only hitting about 60C and making sure it stayed within power limit and figured out I could make upwards of $5 a day! Decided to switch over to ETH at this point just to see what the hubbub is about and, hey, if it's gonna grow, I was fine with the mining rate the card was giving me. Then I met the dev fee. I had no idea what this was or why Nanopool was double dipping with a pool AND a dev fee, so I looked it up and found out "yea, Nanominer has a stupid high dev fee and it's fairly limiting. Just use Claymore or Phoenix miner instead, it has better performance and lower dev fees." Sold, this has become a for-profit in my spare time thing anyway, might as well optimize it. I didn't do any other research other than google the name "claymore miner," went to their website, found out their website sketched me out, found their github repo, and clicked download. I didn't want to waste any more time with configuring crap, so after I extracted it, I didn't even run the exe, just looked at the setup files. It seemed much more complicated than it was worth to set up, so I threw it in the recycling bin. Next one. Went to look at Phoenix miner and saw people praising it, saw setup guides on nanopool and other pools for it (oh yea, finally looked at pool options and found out ethmine might be a better choice), and all the posts were much more recent. This definitely felt like the right choice. Copped the miner from the official github page without much thought, plugged the commands into the batch file, and as soon as I tuned down nanominer, I started up Phoenix. I had been running Phoenix for a few days by that point and had gotten rid of all traces of other miners EXCEPT for Nicehash, the windows store one (honestly didn't remember it was there till later), nanominer and phoenix. Only ran phoenix for a couple days after. this all culminates to around 2-3 days ago when I finally did my own due diligence. I asked myself "so, phoenix seems to be popular, but I saw an article saying something about viruses and compromising versions of it? What's going on? Then I found Nicehash's statement. Big bold letters. "STOP using Phoenix miner immediately!" Oh poopy. I click on the article, read through it, and absolutely panic, as one does at a FUD article over a subject they know little about. But, while I'm reading through this article, I find responses to this with youtube videos, which I watch, that link to the bitcoin talk forum that has the official statements, releases, and whole thread from Phoenix Miner themselves. They denounce any wrongdoing whatsoever, I breathe a quick sigh of relief, riiiiiight before reading what their campaign against NiceHash entails. This is where I finally learn about the correspondence, the individuals previously associated with NiceHash , the practices occuring, all of it. As I am sitting there, absorbing both sides of the argument alongside words of wisdom from the OG miners while scrubbing through the thread, a sense of dread and a sudden realization washes over me. What the kibledy-bips did I do to my machine over the past 2 weeks. I downloaded not 1, not 2, but seven mining applications, the majority of which were unsigned, required me to disable my antivirus, and had to be run with heightened privileges to execute properly. I even uploaded the executables to a virus scanning site to cross-reference with all known databases, had half of them come back with "this is bad" and still went "well, that's life." None of that set any alarms off and I kept going until I found out that the best miners that were recommended were at each other's throats about how the other is too shady to be trusted. Not only this, I put all of this crap on my personal machine. Not a dedicated mining rig, not a throwaway laptop, not a secondhand PC with no data on it. My baby. I got sick. I continued doing research on mining applications and realized claymore, one of the apps I download, was caught in an exit scam and stole all their user's gains. I read stories about how people that used miners, even the legitimate copies, were getting hacked and had ransomware, remote desktop access, random user privilege assignments and credit card details stolen (although many of them also either downloaded some other shady program, or didn't get an official version of the mining software). All I knew at that point was that I was in over my head in an area I wanted to leave. I downloaded malwarebytes, started monitoring processes and services, uninstalled any application I hadn't used in the past month, went through the event logs to see if I was already compromised, and continuously scanned, quarantined, and deleted/shredded everything I could possibly think of that was tied to the miner on the machine. I checked the hash of every miner that I questioned whether it was official and whether or not it could be trusted (everything came back as the official SHA256 that I could find). While looking even deeper into the FUD stories of people that got hacked, I decided it was in my best interest to check my other devices such as my router to see if ports had been forwarded, slam my computer AND phone into VPN only mode for all apps, reset all of my access passwords for my machines and enable 2FA on all of the things, until I finally decided to take about 5 seconds and think about all the crap I was reading. The people that got hacked with mining software also had other shady downloads that they executed. A swathe of other people had suggested these miners, and all of them had a respectable amount of download or at least some semblance of safety tied to them that the damage could be undone. Even PhoenixMiner on their thread had stated "Why would we want to destroy a source of income for us. We can't get you to fully trust us, but maybe you'll believe we aren't idiots." Maybe I wasn't completely SoL. I looked more into it and, as expected, the scams that had happened in the past had already happened. I didn't find any logs that didn't already occur previously on the system or processes/services that weren't normal. New weird new apps installed, no strange behaviour. The only issues that could crop up were based on what I already had on there with binaries I had no idea about. Problem was, I already ran this code, and I couldn't just go back in tiiiiiiiiiiii-RESTORE POINT. Okay, not a fool-proof solution if you feel you've been hacked or have a virus, but at least a start. Go back to a restore point before you clicked the executable and ran the binaries and messed with the registry in ways YOU can't fix. I looked and, sadly, the furthest back my restore point was had been made after I had downloaded nanominer, meaning the BFGminer and ETHminer incidents would still have occurred. But, at least claymore and the current pressing issue, phoenixminer, would be wiped. I pulled the trigger on that and, as the computer restarted, flashed the bios for good measure. Sure, it overwrote my OC settings, but I can always set those again. It would be absolute mania trying to get another graphics card. As I write this, dear reader, I am running another few scans of MBAM and Kaspersky, uninstalling all the programs over again to ensure nothing foul remains, and plan on soft-resetting windows to leave my files but put a fresh coat over this install, where I will once again flash the bios after it's completion for good measure. Is it helping me sleep better tonight? NO. And this is the part where I leave the people looking to mine with guidelines and ask questions for the people that might be able to help me: 1. System restore. Do it if you haven't, do it again if you have. 2. bitcoin talk forum is THE place to go for mining any altcoin. They have a credit system that tells you how new someone is so you know who to avoid if they make a post about a miner, and the discussions there will point you in the right direction. 3. DON'T RUN IN ADMIN MODE. 4. Know that it will never be 100% safe. If that bugs you, this isn't for you. 5. Don't mine on your personal computer, if you can help it. It is possible if you trust the miner and have done the research (or know who to ask the right questions to) but unless you have some experience, it isn't worth risking your files to whatever attack might happen. Multiple ingress points here, even if you do things the right way. So, my questions and concerns to the experts: 1. Based on the miners I said I had used at the times I used them (or only downloaded), do you still think there is risk that something has injected itself into my system? I had only ever used SSL connections to the pools, but I did not always have my VPN on while mining, and obviously, admin mode was stupid. 2. Am I going far enough with a windows soft reset, or should I go ahead and pull the trigger on formatting my hard drives and re-installing fresh with a bios flash? I'd prefer not to lose lose some apps, passwords and a decent chunk of files, but they were mainly archival in nature and anything super important I have backups of elsewhere. 3. Do we know of any network-spreading 4. What do you recommend to people wanting to dip their toes into mining? Seems like the entire place is a minefield people are tiptoeing around while snipers attempt to pop them in the head, miss, and blow someone else up.
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Hello everyone, I have a GTX 980 and an R9 390 at stock mining using nicehash. The nicehash profitability calculator says I should make about 2.05GBP/Day but it's barely making £1.50 a day often reaching £1.30. Is this something I did wrong? what are the best algorithms for my cards I searched a lot for my specific cards online but I kept getting some other miners other than nicehash. Right now I'm mining with Zhash on the 980 and KAWPOW for the r9. I have uploaded the pictures of my overclocks on both cards.
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On 31st of December i found my my nicehash made no money and my internet wasn't working. i stopped the mining and got to my work, 10 mins after stopping i had my internet back working. I thought it was a coincidence. But throughout the day i found out that 5 mins into mining, my internet stops working. I am on wired connection and my wifi still provides internet, it is just my PC that loses internet. I tried using PIA thinking it might be some kind of geoblocking that Indian govt might be implementing without any legal procedure (happens), but my internet still crashed. Asus RT-AC 1200 is my wifi router, in case that matters.
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Hello There, I am currently using Manjaro as my OS and when I dont use it I generally mine using Nicehash. However there is no nicehash client for Linux. (nuxhash is currently not working) So my Idea was to run Nicehash OS in a Virtual machine with GPU passthrough. Has anyone done this before? Is my Idea completly off and there is a better way? What VM software should i use? (I was thinking QEMU because i heard it was good at passing through a GPU). I mainly want to use Nicehash because i need to get above the 0.001 Minimum and its easy to use(On windows, and i have a NicehashOS stick to boot from). Best regards!
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Alright, this one is a weird one. While running nicehash quickminer, randomly (sometimes within a few minutes, sometimes after several hours) all my USB peripherals stutter and miss inputs (acts like a polling rate of 1hz, where the mouse only updates once a second) and audio (which is over USB) turns to mostly static. This issue is usually resolved right after stopping the miner... I've tried reinstalling GPU drivers (with DDU + NVCleaninstall), reinstalling chipset and audio drivers, deleting all USB drivers in device manager and lettings windows reinstall drivers, nothing. Any Ideas? (Before I give up and reinstall windows for the idk 832? time). Edit: I actually experienced this behaviour before (however I don't remember if it was related to nicehash that time, it was caused by the thunderbolt dock from what I remember (which I'm no longer using))
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I downloaded Nicehash to try and follow all the guides required for AMD. After I mined for a few hours I turn off my computer, once I boot it up again to play I was lagging so hard, did some internet connection testing and on the wi fi was okay, but on the PC was only 200KBps downloads speed. So I reset all my internet options, reset the router, formated my PC, reset the bios and I'm still having this problem. I couldn't even finish installing the drivers because of the slow download. Specs: Ryzen 9 5900x RX 570 4GB SAPPHIRE PULSE OC (I live in Brazil GPU are 10x the US pricings) ASUS ROG B550 Gaming-A 2x16GB XPG D60G 3600mhz Crucial BX500 480GB SSD 2TB SEAGATE 7200RPM HD No PC parts were changed for troubleshooting, also don't have another internet to test or wi fi. The PC is almost unusable anymore, can't download anything
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Hello everyone Sorry for my bad english I started mining with a single 1060 6gb months ago because i saw that nicehash method really really easy.. but now i am into mining and running six 1060 6gb on nicehash.. i have not that many complaints other then a blue screen sometimes. But still i am hearing alot about hiveos.. now i think i have that much knowledge that i can switch to different platforms.. but still i wanted to know that should i switch? Since i have seen some guyz on internet having lower power consumption and increase in profit after switching to hiveos.. I don't wanted to pay pool fees and all those things since hiveos has hive on pool which is free.. still i want some suggestions from you guyz that will i get a bit more out of my gpus if i switch to hiveos?
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So I'm using my acer predator helios 300- i7-8750H, GTX 1060, 16gb single channel, 180w power brick, for mining using nicehash quickminer. Optimize feature is unavailable of course since it's a 10 series card. I'm just using it on stock frequencies and since it's a laptop I cannot change the power limits in msi afterburner. Now, it uses 87W and gives a hashrate of 16MH/s. The temps get a bit high 71-73°C. Nicehash on startup gives a message failed to get power limits but that's normal on laptops apparently, it also shows that error on my other laptop with a rtx2060. Now for the weird part if I start playing something on Amazon prime, the tdp magically drops to 60W! The hashrate remains the same, I can even use the stock "overclock profile" in the predator sense application and get a hashrate of 17MH/s. Now this does not work if I'm playing a video on youtube?????? Anybody have any idea on what's going on here?
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im using nicehash what are you guys working with? , ive been having issues with nicehash'es devs , and i wanna swap my mining software , what do you guys use?
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Hi, I watched linus's video a month or so ago and been using Nicehash to mine on my 2080 super and already mined over 100 euro's. I know NiceHash is kind of a beginner mining tool and was looking into a more "official" tool because I'm kind of hooked now. What do you guy's use to mine?
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Last night here I left a sell market order on Nicehash. I waited a long while and I just thought the FIFO line was long so I went to bed. Now I wake up to have all registry of my order disappearing. I added a new sell order now but I lost a significant bit of value ofc. Luckily I left a tab opened and was able to take a print and created a ticket there, but this seems really shady. Widrawals are temporarily blocked so it seems my Bitcoin there is stuck on the downfall. I'm really frustrated and don't know what else to do. Update: the new sell order was processed now but yeah, I lost quite a bit it seems, given that Bitcoin was valued around 35k € last night and now at 32k. I hope they assume my loss but I think that's a fool's hope.
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So as the title says, I installed NiceHashMiner and have now been mining since the 7th of May. My GPU is a MSI Gaming X 1070 8G and when mining it runs at full load at 56ºC with the fan always at 70%. If it matters, the most used algorythims are Equihash and Lbry as seen here: https://www.nicehash.com/index.jsp?utm_source=NHM&p=miners&addr=1DqMRHBu47ibQbBWFfTH71NBjWh3RBiW6x I'm always having second thoughts about continuing to mine or not, because I'm afraid it might cause permanent damage and decrease perfomance in games and lifetime of the card. Again, it is running at 100%, 1974MHz with fan at 70%, temps from 55-60ºC, 24 hours a day, every day. I've made 2 posts on reddit and there are so many mixed opinions that I got even more confused. Some people say I should stop immediatly and a guy even said he lost his 1080 in just 2 months and others say did if my temps are fine then there is no problem. Should I stop or change any settings or just reduce my mining hours, or is it perfectly fine? PS: I haven't used my PC because of upcoming exams and the only thing connected to it is the power and ethernet cable so the only work it's doing is really just mining. Thanks in advance.
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Anyone tried the Nicehash 2.0 software. I have seen an increase of around 5% or so. just using my gaming PC during it's downtime as my folding PC will be out for action for some time. Would be good to see if anyone else has seen an improvement.
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Hi! I have a spare gtx 750 ti that is just lying around and would like to use it for bitcoin mining. The only problem is that my desktop only has enough room for my current gtx 1060. Is there a way that I could have an external adapter to run my 750 ti to mine using nicehash? And if I could, would there be any major performance loss because of the adapter?
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Hello everyone! I have just started getting into bitcoin mining with my gaming pc which has a gtx 1060 6gb GPU, and am making around $1.5 from nicehash per day. I am wondering though, if I can pair my old gtx 750 ti ftw to do more bitcoin mining. This would be without SLI of course, so I'm not really sure if this would work. Thanks in advance!
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Hey there! I recently got back to mining on my 2 rigs, one running a 1080, the other one an RX480. On the former one NiceHash runs just fine, but on the latter things are different: I started using the current driver, which resulted in the Benchmarks not completing, and the system crashing. When I installed the recommended driver 16.11.5 the system didn't crash anymore, but neither did the benchmarks complete. The weird thing is, that if I run the miners that come packaged with NiceHash manually, it works fine... Any ideas?
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Hey there! I try to run instances of NiceHash on 2 of my machines (6700K-1080 and 7500-rx480). On the former one it is working without any issues,but on the latter one some weird stuff is happening.... When I tried running the NiceHash Benchmarks on the current AMD drivers, not only did the benchmarks not finish, but the system outright crashed a few times. Going down to the suggested driver version 16.11.5 the system doesn't crash anymore, but the benchmarks don't finish either. I tried running the miners that come packaged with NiceHash directly (via console) and that seems to work fine.... Any suggestions?