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@Jezston
My partner was walking our (very small) dog in the park at the back of the estate which has a 5mph access road, a van driver sped up and tried to run them over for having the audacity to be in his way. Cue much argument ending with him walking off. He would have returned to a flat tyre and dog poo on underside of the driver's door handle. I certainly couldn't suggest you do the same but I've never been more proud. -
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Will also vouch for @Vince and his wheels being excellently built, good value, and a lovely guy.
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When I had a record trashed by the fine folks delivering the post in SA I don't believe we opened up a return claim. We dealt with it all by eBay messages, him sending me photos of the packing and the damage for the claim then I refunded the purchase and opened a Royal Mail claim that was surprisingly painless.
Are the return claims linked to conflict resolution centre? If so I'd want to avoid that at all costs anyway. -
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@user71349 @velohobbit
Looking at your photo that looks like it's an a5 wide which should be about 27cm x 16cm active area
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Bumping you for a good price. Legacy driver has ours still working fine on OS Sierra in case anyone is worried
https://www.wacom.com/en/support/product-support/drivers -
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Honestly not really, obviously it would be a bit of pisser if both died before Volta cards are released. Neither card runs particularly hot though and I've had the 1060 since new and well before the price inflation so as far as I'm concerned I've already had my value from them and this is all just a bonus.
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There's more photos of the frame including the bend in the link but the one that shows it most clearly is this one: https://photos.app.goo.gl/4mNTd6wG39NqkUpz1
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The easiest way (assuming Windows OS) is to run NiceHash where you're basically selling your processing power to other people and being paid for it. If you already have a decent GPU then it's quite likely that it is profitable for you but as a guide you can check on NiceHash's profitability calculator. That will mine multiple coins, switching to whichever is the most profitable. It's by far the easiest way in, all payments are made to you in BTC. Check their minimum transaction fee and cut.
Otherwise look in to joining a mining pool, Mining Pool Hub is decent place to start.
I use NiceHash with my GTX 1060 and RX 570 on two different systems averaging about 0.0005 BTC a day and the (expensive renewable) electricity is about 80p per day to run them 24/7.
If you've already got a profitable card I see no reason not to, likewise if you game and want to offset the extortionate cost of a new card, or if you just wanted to mine for speculative reasons at current values a GTX 1080 Ti would take about ten months to pay for itself assuming no change in BTC value.
Another option is do some research and alternately mine new/low value coins in the hopes they leap in value, but obviously that's a lot more hands on.
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@RangelTattooer @hma
Happy to split if you're both committed, I'll measure the steerer tonight when I get home and let you know. -
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Ah fair, I didn't know that about Bittrex or Bitfinex. Is the $10,000 relatively new as I've never had that much in? I know they introduced minimum withdrawal amounts of about $400 for BTC as their target audience not people doing small trades.
As far as Binance goes a friend of mine registered on Monday and had verification completed yesterday. Maybe they just got lucky but that's still worth a shot.
I've never seen a TRA meeting so full of livid people as the one that followed those estimates being received.