homebrew-golem
Gridcoin-Tasks
homebrew-golem | Gridcoin-Tasks | |
---|---|---|
25 | 105 | |
39 | 24 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
almost 4 years ago | over 2 years ago | |
Ruby | ||
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
homebrew-golem
-
How do you break into the space and where is a good place to find projects to work on?
Golem, develop Docker applications and make use of their (now) very limited features. It's best suited for heavy calculations, or calculations you can split up between dozens or hundreds of nodes through sharding. A fork is working on bringing GPU & internet access, but it can be hard otherwise. They have a GLM Rewards Program that - generously rewards up to 20 users per month under regular conditions.
-
Calling all developers, what are your opinions and experiences with various cryptocurrency protocols?
For compute, my experience has been the best with Akash, then Golem, then I have been unsuccessful with any other project as of yet. Both of these supports Docker images, but Golem is painfully thorough with securing providers with sandboxing in both networking and workloads. This makes Akash easier to use right now when wanting to run something more advanced such as a custom backend or a Minecraft Server.
-
Isn't ICP a *clear* evolution of blockchain technology, am I missing something?
If you want to run scientific calculations or similar, I highly recommend Golem. Right now, its best applications are ones that can scale by sharding, to use parallel computations. Think doing 100 similar small jobs on 100 computers instead of 1 large job on 1 computer. One average CPU-month costs $3.17, or you can rent 100 CPU-hours for $0.44. Notable examples are blender_cuda which runs on a GPU, and the entirety of awesome-golem.
- sheepit alternatives (as a contributor)
-
Summary of the Golem AMA January 2022
Website: http://golem.network/
-
Guys I need a new project! Please provide ideas!!
if you're not using your computer, you can consider letting other people use it! come checkout golem, a distributed super computer similar to Folding@Home, but for all kinds of computation not just protein research. You even earn some money and it's really easy to get started.
-
Electricity/Cooling: how do you all afford it?
This is where the math of VPS on demand for testing vs home starts to matter. OR higher buy in but lower ongoing is SBC boards. Raspberry pi, turingpi, ION whatever boards from nvidia. All have higher cost, more limited abilities (in some ways) but FOR SURE are way lower power/heat than traditional low initial cost/higher ongoing. It's a common issue. Getting yourself a NAS or ESOS or SAN or whatever as an always on, mount it on the projects you need as storage. Depends on what you want, but an always on computer can do a hell of allot. golem.network, idle mining, BOINC for science, etc etc. Dunno, GLHF
-
What to do with 18,000 Cores?
It is public and been running for a bit now, seeing as you asked I assume its ok for me to say its golem.network ? Definitely open though if you want to join
- Spielstopp Blockchain Service
-
Why would you build a Raspberry Pi Cluster?
Run a golem.network node to rent out some pi's to others who can purchase their compute power, isn't much but glad to help someone when I'm not using it
Gridcoin-Tasks
-
Boinc lets you help cutting-edge science research using your computer
Anyone interested should also look into Gridcoin, you can get some crypto back in addition to doing some good science.
https://gridcoin.us/
-
I have a 3080 with me doing nothign with free electricity what to do with it
Gridcoin. Support science. https://gridcoin.us
-
Disturbing everyone here Could you please share some ideas for a CPU mining rack?
Been around longer than Eth has. You can check out the mining/crunching guides at gridcoin.us. If you run into any questions hop on the discord people are happy to help
-
What are the best projects for running on a raspberry pi 4 (8gb)?
Generally in terms of best to run for earning GRC it's math > physics > health augmented by CPU/GPU. You can get an idea of which those are by looking at the whitelist on gridcoin.us. I would avoid sidock for pis, iirc their workunits are very read/write heavy which isn't great for an SD-card based system.
-
Team develops a faster, cheaper way to train large language models
Gridcoin - This cryptocurrency rewards users for participating in BOINC, a platform for distributed computing that supports a variety of scientific research projects.
-
Crypto mining on macOS?
I run BOINC with Gridcoin… but you’re likely not going to make much, if anything, after electricity. It’s for science tho :)
-
Why doesn't something like SETI@Home exist for AI training?
And there's rewards for doing it - https://gridcoin.us/
-
Most decentralized cryptos by number of full nodes
https://gridcoin.us. It’s a project that incentivizes distributive computing.
-
Universe@home, Gone or Missing?
I noticed Universe@home is no longer showing in my wallet whitelist, but cannot find anything on it being removed from GRC. This might be a dumb question, but can anyone give me a link to what happened? I don't see anything on this sub and https://gridcoin.us/ still shows it whitelisted, but I know that's slow to update at times.
-
Proposal for a new faucet, feedback appreciated!
Link to Github issue: https://github.com/gridcoin-community/Gridcoin-Tasks/issues/260
What are some alternatives?
node - Source code for Akash node, a secure, transparent, and peer-to-peer cloud computing network
excavator - NiceHash's proprietary low-level CUDA miner
celo-extension-wallet - :globe_with_meridians: :electric_plug: The celo wallet browser extension enables browsing celo blockchain enabled websites
ethminer - Ethereum miner with OpenCL, CUDA and stratum support
yagna-binaries
boinc - Open-source software for volunteer computing and grid computing.
v1-contracts - 🐍Uniswap V1 smart contracts
litecoincash - Main release & integration tree for Litecoin Cash
darknode-cli - Tool for deploying and managing Darknodes
core - The blockchain that interacts with your bank
homebrew-aws - Homebrew is a package manager for macOS which provides easy installation and update management of additional software. This Tap (repository) contains the Formulae that are used in the macOS AMI that AWS offers.
CurecoinSource - Curecoin 2.0+ Source Code