Author: Arain, ChainCatcher

Editor: Marco, ChainCatcher

 

Ore resumed mining on August 6, becoming a high-profile project on Solona this week, and its popularity on the Web3 data asset platform soared.

On July 29, Ore founder Hardhat Chad released the ORE v2 version update. According to Coingecko data, the price of Ore hit a new high of $1,409 per coin at noon on July 30, an increase of nearly 40% in 24 hours.

Based on the performance of Ore V1 in April this year - the mining enthusiasm brought by the project at that time caused Solana's network to be blocked, forcing Solana to upgrade its technology, as well as the market turmoil before V2 mining, many miners turned their attention to the project and started mining after V2 was launched.

Perhaps affected by the large-scale market crash, contrary to expectations, the price of Ore has been plummeting since mining resumed on August 6. As of press time, its price has fallen by nearly 90% from its highest point, and miners have complained in the community that Ore is at the shutdown price.

Ore V2 Current mining revenue is not optimistic

Ore's anonymous founder Hardhat Chad said that Ore will become the "native currency of the Internet". Similar to Bitcoin, Ore adopts the Proof of Work (PoW) algorithm, and the total supply is also set at 21 million. Unlike Bitcoin, Ore is a "non-exclusive mining reward mechanism". In layman's terms, each miner has his own "problem" to solve, and the "problem" in the hands of each miner may be different, and miners are not in competition with each other.

Conceptually, Ore does not require miners to have hardware facilities or computer knowledge. Its official website claims that "any laptop, mobile phone or home computer can mine ORE. There is no need to buy advanced hardware, even software novices can start mining."

However, this is not the case. According to an interview with ChainCatcher, new miners who planned to mine Ore encountered some problems in deployment.

Miner Xiao C started to study mining after Ore V2 started mining. He said that because the tutorials on the Internet were too fragmented, he tried to deploy them personally but was not very successful. He has now handed over the tutorial documents to the team's technical staff for research.

Wang Xiaolou is a Chinese-speaking KOL in the crypto industry on Twitter. He is also a founding member of KillerWhalesDAO. After successfully mining Ore using a personal computer, he shared his mining tutorial.

He told Chaincatcher that he started mining at 8:00 am on August 6, but did not keep mining. “I don’t remember how long it took. Now the Stake balance shows 0.00458741627 ORE.”

Wang Xiaolou pointed out that Ore has been upgraded to V2. It is not feasible to mine Ore by renting a server. It can be tried successfully using a personal computer. However, his personal "M3" is a bit overwhelmed at present. M3 is the world's first computer chip based on 3nm technology launched by Apple in October 2023.

"It's quite difficult to dig now, but you can try it," said Wang Xiaolou.

Xiao C said that Wang Xiaolou's experience in mining Ore made him reconsider whether to deploy mining Ore. "This is the shutdown price. My friend just said that he only mined 0.0004, which is enough for electricity. The income is so small, I may not consider mining for the time being."

But Wang Xiaolou said he would continue digging, "This is my pursuit of technology."

Chaincather also found that the Ore community is flooded with complaints about the low returns from Ore mining. There are many miners like Wang Xiaolou who are "painful and happy" and joke that they are mining at a loss.

Why is ore attracting attention again?

"Ore2.0 is here. The initial mining extravaganza caused the entire Sol chain to idle, and the price of the coin even rose to tens of thousands of U. Now 2.0 can be mined directly on the web. Open the web page, link the wallet, and you'll need some gas. Hurry up and act." KOLs on Twitter called out as Ore V2 arrived.

As users continue to flock to the high-performance, low-cost Solona public chain, a novel mining protocol "Ore" designed for fair token distribution has emerged. This is like a kind of Bitcoin on Solona, ​​which once set off a mining craze on Solona.

On April 2, ORE V1 was deployed to Solona, ​​providing mining opportunities for those who deposit SOL into smart contracts, thereby sharing the protocol reward of 1 ORE per minute.

Ore has no venture capital backing. Hardhat Chad said it was launched as an experimental hackathon project, and the project won a $50,000 prize from a hackathon supported by the Solana Foundation in early May, which identified Ore as one of the next wave of projects that could have an impact on Solana.

Ore did affect Solona. In mid-April, this conclusion had been verified by the market. Many people became interested in "Bitcoin" on Solona, ​​and with the high output of 1 ORE per minute, Ore mining was once the most used activity on Solana. Because the Ore V1 algorithm is easy to be manipulated, a large amount of spam appeared and blocked the Solona network, causing many transactions initiated by mining activities to fail - only those who submitted successfully could successfully mine Ore.

On April 16, Hardhat Chad announced that it would suspend mining, improve Ore, and launch Ore V2. As a result, Ore temporarily became quiet in the market.

At the end of July, Ore was re-launched in the form of Ore V2, a completely different version from V1. This version is divided into three stages: upgrading v1 token metadata, activating v1 to v2 upgrade, and activating mining.

Ore v2 version updates include:

  • Cancel the administrator variable: The new version uses open source algorithm management and cancels the administrator variable, which will improve the decentralization of the system;

  • Supply limit: Ore v2 sets a total supply limit of 21 million pieces, which is expected to be mined by 2064;

  • Introducing a staking mechanism: miners can obtain up to 2 times the mining rewards through staking;

  • CPU-friendly hash function: The use of a hash function that is more CPU-friendly reduces the requirements for equipment during the mining process and improves the accessibility of mining;

  • Optimize anti-sybil attack strategy: By optimizing the strategy, the risk of sybil attacks is reduced;

  • Client upgrade: more devices will be supported in the future;

  • Smart contracts are upgradeable: Smart contracts can be upgraded in the early stage, but will be permanently frozen in the later stage;

  • Token exchange: v1 tokens can be exchanged 1:1 for the new version of Ore within 3 months, providing old version token holders with an opportunity for a smooth transition.

It is important to note that there are two major changes in version V2: the introduction of a new, more ungameable mining algorithm, DrillX, is intended to ensure that simple mobile phone and laptop miners are never unable to mine due to high prices; the introduction of staking to increase mining rewards, prompting a decrease in demand for creation, incentivizing miners to hold rather than claim and sell to maintain price stability.

But judging from the current discussions in the Ore mining community, the returns of Ore V2 are not as attractive as those of V1, and the introduction of staking has not generated the returns that miners want.

In the Ore Discord, @Bb849 miner was surprised by the V2 price plunge. He wrote, “I don’t understand why the price plummeted. There is actually not enough Ore to dump. We (miners) may have created about 4,000 Ore, but more than 4,000 of them are staked.”

@Junlerotg.xbt replied to Bb840 below that many uninformed buyers overbought Ore before the launch of V2, and started selling because they suffered losses in the current market. This conclusion was supported by many other miners in the V2 discussion area. Other miners pointed out that V1 holders may also upgrade to V2 and sell in the process, after all, the mining cost of V1 is lower - but this part is not much.