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Bitcoin Mining on Mac OS X – GUIMiner  April 23, 2013 – 00:00

In my previous post on bitcoin mining using Mac OS X, I discussed what is in my opinion the easiest way to get your toes wet with mining: BitMinter. BitMinter is a great bitcoin mining pool and its Java based miner makes it very simple to try out bitcoin mining on Mac OS X using your graphics card to calculate hashes.

And while I’m a fan of the BitMinter pool, the mining software – though easy to try – has two notable downsides:

  • The mining software only supports using BitMinter’s mining pool
  • The performance of the mining software falls behind alternatives such as GUIMiner, cgminer and bfgminer

GUIMiner

In terms of ease-of-use, the next bitcoin miner for OS X I’ll discuss is GUIMiner. GUIMiner is also available for Windows and, unfortunately, it’s much easier to find recent binaries for Windows than for OS X.

You can download the official OS X release of GUIMiner here. However, this release is a year or so old at the time of this post. You may be able to find more recent releases here, but you’d be trusting unofficial code on your system.

After you download the disk image (dmg) file, make sure you move the guiminer.app file to a writable location. Attempting to launch it from the dmg file directly will result in GUIMiner crashing.

Once you launch GUIMiner, setup is straight-forward. You can click File>New to create a new tab for a miner. Only the OpenCL miner is supported out-of-the-box. After creating a new OpenCL miner tab, you can select a server (mining pool) from the drop down or select Other and enter the host, port, username and password manually. Select your device (graphics card) and finally click the Start mining! button.

If you have multiple graphics cards, you can add additional miners from the File>New menu or, if you plan on using the same mining pool, right-click your existing miner tab and click Duplicate.

Source: blog.nwoolls.com

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  • Does my computer need a case?
    Nov 20, 2012 by Carl | Posted in Desktops

    I recently built a computer, but I notice that there's not much need for the case. It's for bitcoin mining, so it has no CD/DVD burner or hard drive (it runs off a flash drive), just a lot of graphics cards that get crammed in a small case. What are the effect of heat in a case with a few fans vs no case? Thanks!

    • A good case is designed to move air towards the graphics cards. I'm talking about a large case with a lot of fans. Running 2 or 3 cards in Crossfire inside a small case isn't a very good idea.

      Since you're not using a case at all you could simply point a box fan at the hardware. Just make sure the box fan is blowing air in the same direction as the Graphics cards exhaust.

  • How to add newly mined bitcoin?
    Jan 06, 2013 by JCR | Posted in Security

    How big is a bitcoin ID that could be physically added circulation? How do you add one to circulation, what program is best?

    • Perhaps it's simply that your question is phrased oddly, but what you're talking about is not how bitcoin works. A bitcoin ID is not a bitcoin, it's an address that you receive bitcoins at. Kind of like a checking account …ics cards which has been the standard setup, until recently.

      Please read everything you can find on the official bitcoin website, and all the other excellent resources for information on how bitcoin works.