What to do with all that equipment? How some unemployed cryptocurrency miners are now powering generative algorithms

<p>In mid-September, the Ethereum community transitioned its consensus algorithm from&nbsp;proof-of-work (PoW)&nbsp;to&nbsp;proof-of-stake (PoS)&nbsp;in a process dubbed&nbsp;The Merge&nbsp;that&nbsp;reduced the power consumption of the Ethereum network by 99. 95%, and sounded the death knell for many blockchain miners. Now, anyone with a few coins, an average computer that could run a basic version of Linux could, simply by consigning a few ethers (thirty-two in theory, but there are services that allow you to put half or a quarter),&nbsp;obtain a virtually risk-free return close to a very attractive 8%.</p> <h2>Countdown to The Merge</h2> <h3>Right now, if you Google The Merge, you&rsquo;ll find a countdown to what may be a much more important event than many people&hellip;</h3> <p>medium.com</p> <p>The consequence was immediate: the large GPU farms destined to solve the complex cryptographic equations characteristic of the proof-of-work&nbsp;no longer had anything to offer to an Ethereum network that didn&rsquo;t needed them any longer, and had to find other things to do. Some estimates suggest that, at its peak, Ethereum mining came to support more than a million people using equipment valued at $10 billion.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/enrique-dans/what-to-do-with-all-that-equipment-d0250232ed3c">Read More</a></p>