Hi Ed, I'd love to hear more about your experience with Intel Xeon PhiPS3EdOlkkola wrote:...on an Intel Xeon Phi 7210 CPU (256 threads)...
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Hi Ed, I'd love to hear more about your experience with Intel Xeon PhiPS3EdOlkkola wrote:...on an Intel Xeon Phi 7210 CPU (256 threads)...
Selling may not be your best option to start. There's an old thread I started about my HD 5970s that used to be the fastest BTC miners. Folks said I was nuts but I used earnings to upgrade gear and have since donated all my 5970s to a local computer charity. What gear do you have now? Tell us your specific model numbers and you'll find someone here has tried every possibility there is.GPU timpster wrote:I don't quite have the cash for such a system, but if I sell off my current hardware, I plan to have $700 - 800 to play with. Total. So, I probably want to go a bit below that.
Depending on how they implement the MB there could be eight x8 3.0 slots (my choice) or four x16 3.0 slots. Thanks for the tip, hadn't heard about it and will have to read up on it.GPU timpster wrote:...thread ripper from AMD, as they have 16 core, 32 thread CPUs, and the kicker is 64 PCI-e lanes so that will prevent any GPU limitations. Unfortunately, I probably won't be able to afford such a CPU, so I'll settle for just 24 lanes of PCI-e with their current 16 core CPU. It's only $300 at the moment on certain stores, and that leaves about 200 for the GPUs, considering I'll need a motherboard, ram, and I'd like another hard drive.
I'm not interested in BTC mining of any kind, it has taxes involved and I really don't want to deal with it, I don't think I'd like the effort of keeping up with everything. I know it's currently in a state of high value, but I'm not willing to risk it dropping so quickly, it's just not my idea of investment.Aurum wrote:Depending on how they implement the MB there could be eight x8 3.0 slots (my choice) or four x16 3.0 slots. Thanks for the tip, hadn't heard about it and will have to read up on it.GPU timpster wrote:...thread ripper from AMD, as they have 16 core, 32 thread CPUs, and the kicker is 64 PCI-e lanes so that will prevent any GPU limitations. Unfortunately, I probably won't be able to afford such a CPU, so I'll settle for just 24 lanes of PCI-e with their current 16 core CPU. It's only $300 at the moment on certain stores, and that leaves about 200 for the GPUs, considering I'll need a motherboard, ram, and I'd like another hard drive.
BTW, AMD CPUs have the most computing power for the buck and the Wraith Cooler works really well. I have AM3 and AM3+ MBs but know nothing about the AM4 Ryzen series. Also, the pins on an AMD CPU are far superior to the flimsy unreliable filaments used in the Intel 2011-3 sockets (look at them cross-eyed and they bend and short).
What's the highest BW AM4 MB?
I was about to get an Intel Xeon Phi Coprocessor 7120P and started reading the documentation and DLing the MPSS drivers for Windows. I'm running all rigs on Win7-64 but it does not list it as supported. The docs definitely do not look like plug'n play.PS3EdOlkkola wrote:@des1957 Yes, all systems -- except one -- are Win7 x64. One system is running the linux distro CentOS 7 on an Intel Xeon Phi 7210 CPU (256 threads)...