ÍNDICE #ARTX $ARTX Presentó un precio ajustable con la volatilidad de $0.31092 por una cuota, -21.72% negativo que lo habitual... Sin embargo, con una capitalización de mercado muy baja de $13.17 mi e liquidez on-chain de $1.58 mi en comparación, por ejemplo, con $BTC ¿Te arriesgarías?
¡Te lo advertimos y el Bitcoin acaba de alcanzar un nuevo máximo histórico! 🤩 ¿Te vas a quedar fuera de esto?
¡Este momento es único, pero lo mejor es que aún hay tiempo para aprovechar el mercado! ¡Muchos especialistas ya dicen que hasta finales de este año la mayor cripto del mundo puede llegar a los US$ 200 mil! 💰 🌟 $ETH $BTC #Bitcoin #MercadoBitcoin #Criptoactivos #Inversión #Oportunidad
- #Bitcoin recupera $109,000 🚀 - La red social Truth de Trump solicita un ETF de criptomonedas de Blue Chip 🇺🇸 - El ETF de Bitcoin de iShares de BlackRock supera los 700,000 bitcoins. - El CEO de Metaplanet, Simon, dice que planean pedir prestado contra su bitcoin “para comprar negocios rentables”: FT - Ego Death Capital cierra un fondo de $100 millones para invertir en empresas de bitcoin. $BTC $ETH
#DayTradingStrategy User manages to complete bitcoin mining alone and wins R$1.8 million.
The case is considered highly unlikely due to the increasing complexity of bitcoin mining operations. A miner surprised the market last Thursday, the 3rd, after managing to complete a bitcoin mining operation alone.
For completing the task individually, he kept the entire associated reward, estimated at US$348 thousand (R$1.8 million, at the current exchange rate).
Con Kolivas, a developer at the company CKpool, highlighted that the chances of a miner being able to perform this type of process alone are 1 in 2,800, showing how unique the case really was.
On average, this type of episode occurs once every eight years. The operation implemented by the miner was extremely homemade, with its computing power being equivalent to only 0.00026% of all the computing power associated with the bitcoin network.
Even so, he managed to complete the process alone.
In the early days of Bitcoin, mining was already a complex operation, but with a level of difficulty that allowed individual users to complete these operations and earn cryptocurrency units as a reward. But the strong appreciation of the asset has changed the scenario. Today, mining requires high computing power, advanced equipment and the ability to pay for high energy consumption. Therefore, the operation has increasingly been carried out by large companies or by networks of mining companies that join together to have more computing power.
Even so, some miners with home operations still try their luck. Occasionally, one of them manages to find a window of opportunity and complete the process alone, receiving rewards that usually compensate for the effort.
Bitcoin mining is the process of validating transfers and other information on the cryptocurrency's blockchain network. This information is gathered into blocks that are then validated and included in the network. For validation to occur, the miner needs to solve complex mathematical problems.
This is an original excerpt published in https://exame.com
#DayTradingStrategy User manages to complete bitcoin mining alone and wins R$1.8 million.
The case is considered highly unlikely due to the increasing complexity of bitcoin mining operations. A miner surprised the market last Thursday, the 3rd, after managing to complete a bitcoin mining operation alone.
For completing the task individually, he kept the entire associated reward, estimated at US$348 thousand (R$1.8 million, at the current exchange rate).
Con Kolivas, a developer at the company CKpool, highlighted that the chances of a miner being able to perform this type of process alone are 1 in 2,800, showing how unique the case really was.
On average, this type of episode occurs once every eight years. The operation implemented by the miner was extremely homemade, with its computing power being equivalent to only 0.00026% of all the computing power associated with the bitcoin network.
Even so, he managed to complete the process alone.
In the early days of Bitcoin, mining was already a complex operation, but with a level of difficulty that allowed individual users to complete these operations and earn cryptocurrency units as a reward. But the strong appreciation of the asset has changed the scenario. Today, mining requires high computing power, advanced equipment and the ability to pay for high energy consumption. Therefore, the operation has increasingly been carried out by large companies or by networks of mining companies that join together to have more computing power.
Even so, some miners with home operations still try their luck. Occasionally, one of them manages to find a window of opportunity and complete the process alone, receiving rewards that usually compensate for the effort.
Bitcoin mining is the process of validating transfers and other information on the cryptocurrency's blockchain network. This information is gathered into blocks that are then validated and included in the network. For validation to occur, the miner needs to solve complex mathematical problems.
This is an original excerpt published in https://exame.com