Setting up a Bitcoin username
BIP 353: Making payments social, one DNS entry at a time.
BIP 353: Making payments social, one DNS entry at a time.
In this guide I will lay out the detailed steps for how you can get started running your own Bitcoin mining pool.
I’ve spun up a BTCPay Server instance for my own use and built a guide out of the process, so hopefully this will aid others wanting to accept Monero at their stores, for donations, or any other use-case get up and rolling with BTCPay Server!
Introduction I recently got a new Pixel and had to go through the process of flashing it again, so I wanted to take the chance to make a companion/alternative guide to the official CalyxOS docs with some videos of the process to help guide you through it. Note that this guide assumes the following: You already have a supported device Ensure the Pixel you buy is not a Verizon phone: How to identify a Verizon phone You are running Linux (this guide is specifically done on Pop_OS! 21.10, but should be applicable to most distributions) If you have any further questions or get stuck following this guide, refer to the official documentation: ...
This guide will aim to make it very simple and straightforward for you to start and run your own Monero node and p2pool instance for decentralized and fee-less mining of Monero.
This will be a simple guide to get you started with a few more advanced options/recommendations at the end, but hopefully will help to simplify the process for those of you wanting to get started mining Monero!
In this short post I’ll detail how to run a Monero node using systemd scripts on a Linux server, the most common OS for virtual private servers (VPS).
In this short post I’ll detail how to easily run a Monero node using Docker on a Linux server, the most common OS for virtual private servers (VPS).
In this post I’ll detail how I spun up my blog specifically and how you can do the same easily.