The government paid him well for every coin of crypto he did not mine. The more crypto he did not mine, the more money the government gave him, and he spent every penny he didn't earn on new GPUs to increase the amount of crypto he did not mine. Major Major's father worked without rest at not mining crypto.
Even if all you have is wind and solar, you can still turn it into baseload power by pumping water up behind dams, storing it in battery grids, or turning it into green hydrogen via electrolysis. Hell, you could even use it to heat up salts until they turn into a molten salt, which can be used for about 12 hours, going off of solar towers with molten salt generators...
Even if that's their strategy you're not guaranteed a return when mining. If you or your cluster don't mine the block all of that energy was absolutely wasted. If we didn't have a shitty ass isolated grid we could just sell the energy to another part of the country.
ERCOT is issuing power shortage warnings across Texas claiming they are due to "low performance of solar and wind technologies". Absolute fucking liars. It's sunny as fuck and also windy as fuck in Texas lately. If they are so "low performance", why does ERCOT continue to heavily invest in them? Goddamn, conservatives are vile, sub-human pieces of shit.
ERCOT is lying to artificially inflate pricing and increase profits. Governor Abbot has received millions of dollars from them (that we know of), so the lies are effectively state sanctioned.
Fuck Abbot and fuck ERCOT. They are a cancer upon Texas.
There is no such thing as a "good conservative". No. Such. Thing.
I don't know about this specific case but it's a common practice to have big consumers be on specific agreements with national grid so they can be shut off on demand to ensure the grid integrity. The companies are compensated for the inconvenience in exchange for their flexibility. Usually it's with heavy industries like metal, paper and glass manufacturers.
My knowledge is specific to TVA, but I was privy to such an agreement that a Cryptominer I worked for had.
The Local Utility Provider would bill the company for their usage, but they did not provide the rate. TVA did because of the amount of electricity. This rate is much cheaper than the Utility Provider offers residential customers; economies of scale as well as the inability to store this amount of power meaning it's "wasted" otherwise. Whenever there is a period of intense usage TVA would provide a 30 minute notice. After the 30 minutes were up the rate provided to us (industry) would more than quadruple, and was actually quite a bit above the residential rate. Residential customers are entirely exempt from this. Your rate, is your rate, is your rate.
The effect of the above meant that it was a mad scramble to shut everything offline whenever we got notice. Otherwise we were losing money. Regular industry trudged along because their bottom line doesn't care if their power rate quadrupled for 3 hours a dozen days out of the year. It's not that big a deal.
I definitely got to see the sausage being made, and it's opened up my mind to some of the ignorance around crypto mining. If anything it drove me further away from being interested in it as anything more than a neat tech demonstration that people figured they could trade.
Yep. Architected a bunch of software to measure baselines, prove or disprove responses to demands within requested periods etc.
You don't want giant arc furnaces running full tilt in the midst of an energy crunch. It's enough compensation to cover NOT producing anything that day which the ratepayers pay for but also benefit from.
Everything had to work sub-second round-trip, fun stuff, egomaniacal boss.
Maybe if they didn't have a power grid that was cut off from the rest of the country that wouldn't be a problem. Maybe their citizens wouldn't freeze to death when there's a little snow.
Those damn people, paying for electricity AND using it?!
Edit: Is this take so egregious its not worth even worth discussion? Just downvote and move along?
The hive-mind opinions is one thing, but the lack of interest in actually engaging in discussion is really sad.
But I guess, they do kinda go hand in hand.