Why not add mining capabilities back to every #bitcoin node? Wouldn't this further decentralized and incentivice node running? Not for profitability but as an aggregated, solo-mining coalition that may end up composing a non-zero hash percentage to further add to the difficulty and help safeguard the network. There are around +-21,000 reachable nodes at this moment, if they all use whatever and however small their available collective hashpower of their varied hardware (raspberry pi's or other) is - and they are configured as solo miners, not as a centralized effort in a pool that can be manipulated, this would require very minimal upkeep from the node runner but still have that non-zero chance of winning a lottery at the added low cost incurred in the already running node. People running nodes right now are volunteers, they are already doing this without no expectation of gain - this would help add more nodes and more people however small. Then we have what BitAxe is doing, which could be construed as the concluding point of what I am discussing but not quite, as solo mining still requires interest and more maintenance on the part of the maintainer. Where as solo-mining by default in a node would require extremely low maintenance and just checking every few months to see if you won a block by some miracle - which could serve as a gateway drug to push more people into the BitAxe pathway and further the small-scale, home-base mining decentralization we all want.
This is just a thought but am interested why this is not viable? Tagging specific big players - but interested in anyone that has thoughts on this.
@Matthew Kratter @Guy Swann @Bitcoin Mechanic @Luke Dashjr @jimmysong
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Would like to know thoughts on this as well
Because your CPU is about 10000 times less effective at mining than a single bitaxe.
Bitcoin Core is working on improving the interface for miners and especially home miners though with the introduction of the mining interface and support for stratumv2.