• The first public implementation of Bitcoin was released in early 2009. GPU mining was not possible at this stage. • In October 2010, Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) mining devices first came about. This was made possible with the creation of software to configure GPUs for mining activities. • June 2017, Hong-Kong based
Sapphire Technology became the first firm that produced GPUs tailored specifically for GPU mining. Many of the GPUs did not have display functions and could only be used for mining. • Around 2013 and 2017 respectively, the prices of GPUs skyrocketed amid the GPU mining craze. • In May 2021, China officially banned all cryptocurrency mining, including GPU mining, amid concerns for the environment and economy. • Around March 2022, the price of Bitcoin dipped from around $46,000 to $20,000 within a couple of months, creating concerns about cryptocurrency. • In September 2022,
Ethereum finished the transition from the traditional
Proof of Work algorithm to a
Proof of Stake algorithm, significantly reducing computational costs and thus making it economically infeasible to use GPUs to mine Ethereum. In the run-up to and following the transition, miners begun dumping their GPUs on the second-hand market. Some GPU miners switched to other Proof of Work coins such as
Ethereum Classic, though these alternatives were also unprofitable. • In early January 2023, Mining companies started refactoring their systems to house AI computation. == References ==