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Nvidia's anti-cryptomining GPUs have finally been 100% unlocked [techradar.com]:
It took almost an entire year from their initial release, but the LHR (low hashrate) versions of Nvidia's RTX 30 series graphics cards have finally been completely unlocked by a mining software called Nicehash, restoring each card's respective mining capabilities.
Many of the best graphics cards [techradar.com] were nearly impossible to find [techradar.com] available to buy over the last two years because of the global chip shortage, a broader supply chain crisis at ports around the world and demand for consumer tech putting even more pressure on the availability of semiconductors needed by AMD and Nvidia [techradar.com] for their products.Part of this demand also included cryptominers who were buying up the available stock in bulk of popular GPUs during the height of the recent crypto currency boom. And while there are mixed opinions about how this affected overall availability for gamers and building hobbyists, there was certainly no love lost between the two groups which resulted in Team Green putting measures in place [techradar.com] to make its consumer graphics cards less desirable to those hoping to use them to mine currencies such as Ethereum [techradar.com].
Almost the entire RTX 3000-series of cards [techradar.com] was re-released with hash rate limiters [techradar.com] (not including the GeForce RTX 3090 [techradar.com] as it was deemed too expensive to attract the mining market) which limited their ability to mine currencies like ETH, but several of these were quickly defeated [techradar.com], with some software able to unlock cards to 70-80% efficiency in a matter of weeks.
As reported by WCCFTech [wccftech.com], NiceHash [nicehash.com] has now announced that it can utilize 100% of available mining speeds using these previously restricted Ampere-series cards, stating on its website that:
"We are very excited to tell you that NiceHash QuickMiner (Excavator) is the first mining software to FULLY (100%) UNLOCK LHR cards! Now you can earn more profits than any other mining software on the market if you are using LHR graphics cards with NiceHash QuickMiner".
We don't have an LHR model GPU to verify this claim ourselves, so take the statement with a pinch of salt, but its also worth noting that GPU stock levels and pricing is currently sitting at the best numbers we've seen for many months, so it's unlikely you'll be fighting off swarms of competition if cards are viable for mining again.Analysis: Don't worry about it – no, seriously
This news is unlikely to cause another shortage of graphics cards or even drive up the price of the stock currently available, and that's for a few different reasons. The main piece of good news for gamers is that Ethereum [techradar.com], the world's second most popular cryptocurrency after Bitcoin, moved to proof-of-stake at the end of 2021.
Let me explain. Proof-of-work is a system where computers compete against each other to be the first to solve complex puzzles, which left it open to miners using warehouses full of consumer graphics cards to solve those puzzles, earning some ETH in the process. Proof-of-stake instead uses validators to find a block based on the number of tokens they hold, removing the need for those 'puzzles' to be solved.
This switch from a proof-of-work to a proof-of-stake model has removed a lot of the demand of the graphics cards, so where Ethereum was previously the largest cryptocurrency that is primarily mined using graphics cards (Bitcoin has mostly been mined on ASICs [techradar.com] over the last few years), it is now inefficient to do so.Sure, there are other currencies available that still use a Proof-of-work system, but these don't have the same grasp on the market that ETH did last year, so unless another crypto starts to rocket upwards in value, it'll take some time to see a similar situation unfold.
In reality, this shouldn't impact consumers who are trying to buy a new graphics card in any way, though it does mean that LHR versions of GPUs no longer serve the same purpose. With any luck, Nvidia continues to develop its hashrate limiting technology just in case we see a similar scenario unfold when it releases its Lovelace [techradar.com] series of graphics cards to act as a deterrent.
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Sign up to get breaking news, reviews, opinion, analysis and more, plus the hottest tech deals!
Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions [futureplc.com] and Privacy Policy [futureplc.com] and are aged 16 or over.MOST POPULARMOST SHARED
- 1Here's another sign the Google Pixel 6a is launching very soon [techradar.com]
- 27 new movies and TV shows on Netflix, Prime Video, HBO Max and more this weekend (May 6) [techradar.com]
- 3Dying Light just got the mother of all updates, so I know what I'm playing this weekend [techradar.com]
- 4Canelo vs Bivol live stream: how to watch boxing online from anywhere [techradar.com]
- 5Your mechanical keyboard isn't just annoying, it's also a security risk [techradar.com]
- 1This new Samsung memory card features a quite ridiculous amount of storage [techradar.com]
- 2GPU prices could soon drop below MSRP triggering a ‘surge’ of gamers building PCs [techradar.com]
- 3Google quietly made one of the best laptops ever, and I want to see a follow-up at IO 2022 [techradar.com]
- 4How to clear your Android cache, whether you should, and top alternatives [techradar.com]
- 5Stranger Things 4 cost more than Game of Thrones and The Mandalorian combined [techradar.com]
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From$12.99 [awin1.com]View [awin1.com]
TechRadar is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site [futureplc.com].
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- Contact Us [techradar.com]
- Terms and conditions [futureplc.com]
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- Advertise with us [techradar.com]
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© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.