twenty8two
CryptoMining is Back? ASUS Partners With Quantumcloud CryptoMining is Back? ASUS Partners With Quantumcloud
Back in 2017, cryptocurrency mining became a trend that combined computer hardware and finance into what looked to be the true form of currency... CryptoMining is Back? ASUS Partners With Quantumcloud

Back in 2017, cryptocurrency mining became a trend that combined computer hardware and finance into what looked to be the true form of currency for the digital age. Many groups and companies were formed, all to “mine” different kinds of these electronic currencies, with bitcoin being the most popular. A lot of industries tried to ease their way into the trend, with cafes and restaurants even setting up payment options via bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies.

How did you mine for bitcoin? Well, the short of it is you use the processor in your video card to compute for solutions to a finite number of digitally-generated equations. Don’t worry about the math, you won’t need to learn it because it’s your GPU that’s doing all the solving anyway. After it has solved an equation, or is part of the group of GPUs that solved the equation, your account is awarded with a portion of a bitcoin. The process repeats and that’s how bitcoin is mined. This led to a mining craze, with an actual shortage of video cards available to mainstream consumers and drove up the prices of computer hardware, with GPUs and RAM chips experiencing the most price gain.

But that feverish race to mine the most bitcoin has subsided somewhat, and the speculation market has since quieted down. Has the cryptocurrency bubble popped? Some would say yes, but there are others who still have a possible way even for gamers to passively gain income from this virtual currency.

ASUS has announced its partnership with Quantumcloud, a startup company specializing in cloud-based computing and cryptocurrency mining. Quantumcloud is an app that helps its customers mine cryptocurrency via their video cards, is safe, and relatively easy to use. ASUS brings its heavyweight graphics cards to this team-up, ensuring the best possible components and enjoys a high number of users.

But how does it work?

People who buy ASUS graphics cards can access the Quantumcloud app and basically have their GPU mine as they use it or they also have the possibility of others use their video card to mine. When it comes to mining, the more GPUs working in conjunction, the more BitCoin or currency they can collect. Thanks to cloud computing, linking multiple cards together despite physical distance is possible. NVIDIA had released a similar service in 2017 called GeForce NOW, which enabled users with low-end PCs to be able to game on better graphics cards via access to NVIDIA’s cloud servers. In a way, you use the cloud to connect your PC to an NVIDIA GeForce 1080 (at the time of announcement, the best GPU the company had) and play games without latency.

For safety, Quantumcloud offers secure transactions via PayPal or WeChat, and has the strictest General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Compliance protection for all user data. To simplify the user experience, digital wallet management, cryptocurrency mining mix, currency conversions, and fiat transfers are all integrated into the back-end of the Quantumcloud software.

ASUS Philippines’ Robert Osorio, Marketing Manager for the Open Platform Business Group, summarized the process as follows:

  1. Users need a PayPal account
  2. Create and register an account on the Quantumcloud website
  3. Download the app here
  4. User lets his video card idle, meaning the PC is on, connected to the Internet, and not being used for anything
  5. The video card mines “QDots”, the Quantumcloud currency, which has a monetary equivalent
  6. Users will be able to monitor their qdot stash, the total cash equivalent, and can be paid on the app itself
  7. Payouts will be on the user’s PayPal account

There’s no actual word on when ASUS will be deploying this service, or if there are perks for buying “ASUSxQuantumcloud”-branded video cards if ever, but if users do get on-board with the idea of idle mining through the cloud, this could spell the more conservative return of cryptocurrency mining and may open the phenomenon to more people.

Do note that cryptomining is not a simple task. Please do observe due dilligence and do extensive research about this topic before engaging in it for yourself.

JD Pablo Editor-in-Chief

JD Pablo is the current Editor-in-Chief of twenty8two. Enjoys video games, pizza, banana bread, and tea. Takes coffee black.

No comments so far.

Be first to leave comment below.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *