Veteran ASIC chip producer BitFury announced yesterday via Twitter that they are “finally” coming to market with a 16-nanometer chip which will be, reportedly, the fastest chip on record.
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George Kikvadze @BitfuryGeorge
BAM: Our upgrade to 16nm chip tech finally on its way !! This is the most advanced tech for next 2 yrs! Go Go Go! Nothing stopping us now!!
7:52 AM - 13 Oct 2016
17 17 Retweets 44 44 likes
According to their own website, the chip will produce up to 180 gigahashes per second, per chip. The news mainly affects ASIC miner producers, since small-scale, consumer-facing sales are not the purview of BitFury. Effectively, this would mean a 1 terrahash rig would only require 6 chips total, massively decreasing the size of future mining hardware.
For some perspective, one of the earliest 1 TH/s rigs to market, which used Bitmine’s CoinCraft A1 chips (around 25-26 gigahashes per second each), weighed around 33 pounds and required a great deal of power. In the same way that modern cell phones have more computing power than it took to control NASA’s 1969 Apollo 11 moon landing, the next generation of ASIC Bitcoin miners will require far less space to produce security and profitability equivalent to the state-of-the-art from just a couple of years ago.
ASIC miner designers will most likely opt for more power per unit, however. The machines can retail in the tens of thousands of dollars when completed, and enjoy a continually high value due to the limited scope of their market. Bitcoin mining outfits will be scrambling to replace their old units when the new ones do hit the market. No commercial rigs have yet been announced which are running the hardware, but it is likely new partnerships will come out of the advancement.
Dedicated ASIC Bitcoin mining hardware does not only impact the Bitcoin network, but other networks which are frequently merge-mined with Bitcoin, including Namecoin, which still offers a promising future for decentralized DNS.
Potential Beyond Commercial Mining?
Companies like 21, Inc, which produces the “Bitcoin computer,” could make use of chips like BitFury’s. Even regular, commercial computer manufacturers could find space for these chips, enabling large networks of individually low-hashpower miners to, together, add security to the blockchain and produce miniscule profits on an individual basis. The overall electricity investment dramatically drops with the 16nm chip. According to BitFury: