Electroneum ETN Miner Computer

Electroneum ETN Miner Computer Rating: 9,5/10 955reviews

Pool+ Browser Miner What is MoneroMiner.Rocks? MoneroMiner.Rocks was designed to allow users to easily start mining the cryptocurrency Monero (XMR) and Electroneum (ETN). The Pool+ and 1M Hash Payout Browser Miners are easy to use and have built it mining features. You do not have to download or configure any software. What is Monero? Monero is an open-source cryptocurrency created in April 2014 that focuses on privacy and decentralization that runs on Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and FreeBSD. Monero uses a public ledger to record transactions while new units are created through a process called mining.

SRC: What is Electroneum? Electroneum has been designed and built to give ordinary, non-technical users a chance to obtain and enjoy a cryptocurrency.

They have developed an iOS and Android app that not only contains easy wallet functions, but also allows a mining experience to let anybody get into cryptocurrency within minutes of downloading a free app. Mine Monero XMR Without Hardware. SRC: Currently we offer three types of miners.

Electroneum ETN Miner Computer

• (Mines Monero XMR and Electroneum ETN) – For users running more than one computer/device. • (Mines Monero XMR) – For computers and other devices. • (Mines Electroneum ETN) – For computers and other devices. • (1M Hash Payout, Mines Monero XMR) – For integration on websites.

You can try out the miners above before registering an account. Mining can be profitable but it can also be non profitable depending on electricty costs, price of the coin and hash rate. It is good to do some research before you start mining.

Configure the following settings: # of Threads Select the number of cores your computer has. If you’re not sure, press and hold Ctrl, Alt, Delete together. Then click on Start Task Manager and move to the Performance tab. Count the number of graphs in the CPU Usage History group (or in Windows 8 or later, read the number after Cores).

Pool URL This is the URL of the pool you are mining to. This URL is usually in the following format: stratum+tcp:///electroneum-etn-miner-computer.html:[port] where URL is replaced with the pool URL and [port] is replaced with a specific port number (typically 4 digits). As a start, I recommend you use the EasyHash pool. Choose from the following two addresses based on your computer’s power: • stratum+tcp://etn.easyhash.io:3630 (for low to mid range CPUs) • stratum+tcp://etn.easyhash.io:3631 (for higher end CPUs) As you get more advanced you can start experimenting with other pools.

You’ll find an extensive list of pools. Start Mining Now press Start Mining. And that’s it! You should now be mining. The program will show progress in the Miner output area. You’ll also see your Hash Rate (the number of hashes your computer submits per second) as well as Total Shares, which is a count of the contributions your computer has made to the pool.

As you can see, my computer is mining at 31.38 hashes per second (very slow) and has submitted 8 shares. You will be paid in ETN relative to the contributions your computer has made. The most important parameter to focus on here is your Hash Rate. Play around with the variables above to maximise this rate, and you should see a slight increase in your payments. A decent hash rate to have is around 200 H/s.

You should be able to achieve this with a multi-core i7 processor. Checking Your Earnings You can typically check your earnings on your specific pool’s website. If you’re using EasyHash, you can check your earnings. Visit the site of the pool you are using and copy your public wallet address into the field saying Your Stats and Payment History. You’ll see a breakdown of your mining history on this screen. The Pending Balance is the number of coins you have mined, but which have not been paid out. Once the coins reach a certain number of coins (10 ETN at the moment, I believe), the coins will be paid out to your wallet and will transfer to the Total Paid section.

Electroneum decided that maintaining mining pools was too much of a drain on resources so they shut them down. The Electroneum Pool Miner now needs to be set to a third party pool. Unfortunately, the 1.2 beta version of the program has some serious flaws. A) If you lose your connection, even for a moment, its game over. It will stop mining until manually told to start again. I’ve lost many hours when the connection dropped while I was asleep.

B) It simply will not run at all on some systems. Runs fine on my i7 Skylake, but fails silently with event errors in minerd.exe on my i7 Bloomfield. This has nothing to do with anti-virus software which usually gets the blame.

Hello, thanks for this. I’m new to cryptocurrency mining, but I really want to go into it fully as I understand it’s one of the fastest ways to get rich. The problem I’m having with the ETN app is that after installing the app, I can’t run it. The error message am getting, is: “To run this application you first must install one of the following versions of. NET framework: v4.0.

Contact your application publishers for instructions about obtaining the appropriate version of the.NET framework.” Please, how can I resolve this issue? Thanks for the great tutorial! Currently, I’m mining ETN and having them sent to my paper wallet. I know I can check the balance and do transfers by importing my paper wallet to the CLI wallet. But I have some questions here. Is this “importing” process making an “alias” of my paper wallet? I.e., the CLI wallet generated is an alias of my paper wallet.

Let’s say I have 10ETN in my paper wallet on 2018/01/05. 2.1) After I imported it to a CLI wallet, will my paper wallet’s balance become 0ETN? 2.2) After I imported it to a CLI wallet on 2018/01/06, I can see 10ETN in my CLI wallet. Then I keep mining and still having the ETN sent to my paper wallet, on 2018/01/08, I got 20ETN from mining.

A) At this moment, I guess my paper wallet’s balance is 20ETN, how about the CLI wallet? Still 10ETN as the last time I imported? B) Is there any auto-synchronization between paper wallet and the CLI wallet? Or I need to import manually every time? Is there any transaction fee for importing paper wallet to CLI wallet?

A simple and smart app for mining Electroneum coins (ETN) with your PC. Electroneum can easily mined with CPU power. Earn ETN while sleeping. During working hours. Using WhatToMine you can check, how profitable it is to mine selected altcoins in comparison to ethereum or bitcoin.

Thanks again! Hi, thanks for your kind words! Yes, the CLI wallet is an alias for your paper wallet. The CLI paper is not a new wallet but merely represents the paper wallet.

See it as a “second user” to the same bank account. The CLI wallet reflects the balance of your paper wallet.

Make sure the entire blockchain is synced to your computer. You can do this by opening electroneumd and letting it run in the background. If you leave it running, and then open the CLI wallet concurrently, you should be able to simply hit refresh in the CLI wallet to get the most up-to-date balance. Nope, it’s for free.

Like I said, the CLI is only a “second access” to the same account. You can also use Minergate. It’s really easy and you can use all the other pools. 1) Go to the Minergate website and download and install the Minergate software. 2) Go to the Views menu in the upper left corner.

Tick the checkmark “show other pools.” Now you will see an “Other Pools” menu. 3) Go to the Other Pools menu and then Add Pool. You’ll need pool connections details and your ETN wallet deposit adress for login. To shop the different pools there is a long list of them in the official Electroneum mining channel.