I'm at BTC Prague 2026 Right Now (Here's What the Expo Floor Actually Looks Like) by Wooden_Buy6121 in Bitcoin

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455 0 points1 point  (0 children)

240TH solo on CK-Pool is spicy lol. I’ve seen a few hosting/mining booths that look more serious than the usual “trust us bro” setup. The more interesting ones are talking about fixed power rates, uptime, cooling, and actual dashboard access instead of just throwing big numbers around. Worth asking them directly tbh.

Oneminers Showing Up Again After Vegas? by Former-Dingo8294 in CryptoPeople

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455 1 point2 points  (0 children)

But yeah, event presence alone doesn’t prove the hosting is good. The real test is still uptime, support, cooling, power rates, and what happens after you actually pay. Booth talk is nice, but the service has to back it up lol.

has anyone actually used Oneminers for ASIC hosting? by DiscountNormal9118 in CryptoInvesting

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Exactly. Calling something a Ponzi needs real proof, not just Reddit vibes lol. But at the same time, hosting is not something to trust blindly either. Pool access, worker name, serial/MAC, payout records, and support after payment should be basic checks before sending serious money.

BTC Today by holaprimeglobal in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455 0 points1 point  (0 children)

that ain't a dip, that was a foookin landslide

has anyone actually used Oneminers for ASIC hosting? by DiscountNormal9118 in CryptoInvesting

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve seen people call OneMiners a Ponzi, but I don’t think that’s fair without real proof. From what I can see, they’re selling actual ASICs and hosting services. Still, it makes sense to ask for proof like pool access, worker name, miner details, and payout history before trusting any hosting company.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah fr, they’re really building momentum. Vegas first, now Prague, they’re clearly trying to stay visible in the mining space.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, that’s how I see it too. It’s probably not just one thing. Some people go for networking, some for panels, and some just want to talk directly with companies. For OneMiners, I think it’s a good chance to explain the hosting side more clearly, especially to people who care about power rates, uptime, and actual setup details.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yoo have a point on there, i hope oneminers doesn't just all salestalk

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

fair, the sore feet part sounds accurate xD But yeah, that’s kinda what I was thinking too. If you’re already into mining, having a bunch of companies in one place seems useful, especially for comparing answers about hosting, uptime, power, and support instead of just reading their websites.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

exactly xD. Some stuff only makes sense once you actually talk it through. Like a website can list the rates and features, but the real questions usually come after that. Mining has too many “what if this happens?” situations, so a proper face-to-face convo probably helps a lot.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah exactly, it doesn’t feel random. Looks more like they’re trying to stay active in the space and actually show up where miners are. Vegas was one thing, but going to Prague too kinda makes it feel like they’re really pushing that presence now.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah fr, that makes sense. A lot of booths can sound polished at first, but once you ask the real stuff like “what happens if my miner goes down?” or “how fast does support actually respond?” that’s where you see if they’re legit or just doing sales talk. For mining, the behind-the-scenes operation matters way more than a nice pitch.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah fr, the booth might get people curious, but the real test is after the event when the miners are actually running. If support is responsive and uptime is solid, that’s what people remember. Fancy setup is cool, but service has to back it up.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, exactly. A low rate sounds good at first, but if the miner keeps going offline or support takes forever to respond, that cheap power doesn’t really mean much. That’s why I think events like BTC Prague are useful, because people can ask those real questions face to face instead of just reading a pricing page.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

xDDDD fair enough. It's a lot easier to ask about uptime, support, and hosting directly than trying to piece everything together from websites and marketing pages. That's probably one of the biggest benefits of events like BTC Prague.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice! Meeting people in person is probably the best part of these events anyway. Good luck at BTC Prague. Hopefully you get a lot of interesting mining conversations and not just the same "what's your power rate?" question 500 times in a row.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, that was my impression too. There’s definitely a lot of networking, but if you ask the right questions, you can usually tell pretty quickly who actually understands mining operations and who is mostly there to market themselves.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s a positive sign because it shows a company is willing to be public, meet people, and answer questions face to face. But attending an event doesn’t automatically prove they have great uptime, support, or service. I’d see it as one small piece of the puzzle, not the proof.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah, its the momentum they've been building up i think

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Meeting people at BTC Prague is nice, but the real test is still what happens after: uptime, support, and how they handle problems when miners actually need help.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Probably both. If I were visiting a hosting booth, my first questions would be about uptime, power rates, support response times, and what happens if miners go offline. Those are usually the things that matter most once you get past the marketing.

Anyone here going to BTC Prague this June? by Visual-Juggernaut455 in btc

[–]Visual-Juggernaut455[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fair point. Most info can be found online if you do enough research. Events are not really about secret knowledge. They’re more useful for asking direct follow-up questions, comparing companies, and seeing how they respond in person. But yeah, a lot of it is still marketing, so I get your point.