Another long-awaited post! This time traveling for the day job got in the way. Oh, for a day when I can turn this crypto-hobby into an independently profitable venture… Maybe this is a good time to plug my donation address? If you dig my stuff, please send a few Satoshi to 13FHYdAjkKJXHuiAHNyoHNybEn7yRHrfum. Also see here for other essays related to the University of Nicosia’s MOOC on Digital Currencies.
Essay 7 Prompt: Bitcoin ASICs are pushing the limitations of manufacturing. Where do you believe this could lead given the uncertainty of the future exchange rate ? What could this mean for mining in the mid-term future?
ASIC miners are orders of magnitudes more efficient and effective at running the Bitcoin hashing algorithm, making them by far the most (and perhaps the only) profitable mining hardware setup at present. ASIC miners achieve this superior efficiency by pushing the limits of our current technologies, designing an integrated circuit with the specific configuration most efficient for the relevant Bitcoin mining functions. As a consequence of a direct profit motive to reward improved hardware performance, ASICs represent the apex of mining hardware. The peak, that is, as constrained by certain current technology, for example the density of logic gates, computer cooling technology, and design efficiency of industrial mining farms. The potential for exponential returns from revolutionary advances in mining technology will continue to provide incentives to engineer a better Bitcoin miner, and in a year or a decade we could be debating the impact of the new technology on the formerly ASIC-dominated mining sector.
Over the long-term, the supply of ASICs will continue to increase until competition for blocks and the resulting burgeoning block difficulty pushes the expected value of associated block rewards equal to the marginal cost of an additional miner. Uncertainty in the future price of Bitcoins complicates miner’s calculations in the short- and mid-term, however. If the price of Bitcoin were to double tomorrow, perhaps additional mining rigs bought today would be profitable. On the other hand, if the price were to halve, miners might find an ASIC bought today to be a bad investment. Therefore, future price uncertainty may lead a bullish mining sector to over-invest, and go broke; whereas, a needlessly bearish mining sector might hesitate to invest in additional capacity at the peril of mining efficiency. Therefore, with a more certain future Bitcoin exchange rate, the deployment of mining hardware would bend towards ideally efficient levels.




